This image is another one of my 2008 outer space science fiction image creations. As with all my outer space scenes, I created the initial image with Bryce. I then added a few post render effects with Photoshop.
This image is another one of my 2008 science fiction image creations. As with all my outer space scenes, I created the initial image with Bryce. I then added a few post render effects with Photoshop, including the digital frame.
This image is one of my 2008 science fiction image creations. It is a composite of four Bryce renders. Two of them were with different versions of the sky, along with the same landscape. The planet was a separate render, and lastly I rendered up a black and white alpha channel of the landscape. Using these 4 images in Photoshop as layers I brought them all together to create this final image. I then added a few post render effects with Photoshop, including the digital frame.
This image is yet another one of my 2008 science fiction image creations. As with all my outer space scenes, I created the initial image with Bryce. I then added a few post render effects with Photoshop, including the digital frame.
I originally created this image using the 3D computer graphic program Bryce, with post work in Photoshop, which is when I added the digitally embossed Bill M. Tracer Studio logo signature seal, small as not to distract from the design, while decidedly present, showing authenticity. I made this work of postmodern contemporary art for Sam's Dot publishing to be the wrap around cover for their April 2012 issue of the Science Fiction and Fantasy magazine, "Beyond Centauri". It really made a nice cover. They purchased a non-exclusive license, so as the original artist; I still own the copyright on it, and can continue to market it for posters and other products, as well.
This image is one of my 2008 science fiction image creations. As with all my outer space scenes, I created the initial image with Bryce. I then added a few post render effects with Photoshop, including the digital frame.
A computer graphic with adjustable paramaters, said to illustrate the concept of the harmonics of a weighted string. The graphic display, itself, is poorly documented - we don't know what we are seeing, but we know that it can't be the chain, itself, as the movement is generally circular, not linear and largely screen filling, even for small perturbations.
The pictures are, however, pretty, and this is a mildly enjoyable toy. Without further clarification, though, I can not, in good conscience, do as others have done and classify this as "science" or "physics" because no real learning is taking place.
Llewellyn's job is to sort and search these files, divining interconnections between them and leading the mouse pointer to the likeliest prospects. It is an inexact science, to say the least-but, with history to corroborate recollections of notable avatars, it is actually less so than, say, psychology, in which my past-life regression therapist holds a distinguished Ph.d.
"Then one day I went out to see a friend, and I didn't have much cash on me. This weaselly kid, who I didn't really like, came up to me and gave me this whole cock-and-bull story about he was getting thrown out of his place, blah, blah, and I was getting impatient, and I told him flat: I couldn't help him that day."
Success in life cannot be attributed to wealth alone. Vaastu Consultant Sushil Agarwal takes a look at what Vaastu Shastra has to say about Kuber - the God of Wealth…
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Glass is an interesting and challenging medium of artistic expression. Check out Baptiste Debombourg's sculptural installation at the glass Biennale in la Chaufferie in Strasbourg and leave us your feedback...