Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2012

Lunch Breaks in all its Glory

Now that it's nearly two years since the film was finished I thought I'd post my undergraduate thesis in its entirety. My role on the film was to oversee modeling, lighting, and rendering pipelines. I modeled all four characters and designed the lighting set ups. Please to enjoy!



Friday, July 29, 2011

Collectible

This past winter some ETC students made a short film. I modeled the old woman. Check it out!



My working resolution was 1/4 of what you see here. Clearly, I redid the hair since the film was made.


Sunday, May 2, 2010

Rendering Like Mad

We're down to the last stages of lighting and rendering. While Dave, Ryan, and Rory finish lighting each shot, I check their files and send them to the renderfarm making sure they render without problems. Here's a taste:

Monday, April 19, 2010

Train Lighting WIP

This one of the sets for the other project I'm doing as part of my thesis. Its about a hobo who steals things from people on a train.

The texturing still has a ways to go but you can spot some of it on the seats.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Office Shot 03-01

Our big Motion Blur Test in the office. This shot required that we reduce our resolution to 720p.

Shot 03-01 from Group of Six on Vimeo.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Office Shot 03-10

This shot was particularly difficult to figure out and get to render properly. Because the effect in the window is done in the render, the shot had to be rendered twice with different shaders for those objects behind the glass. Then in After Effects a mask reveals only the part of the window effect layer we want to see.

Then the occlusion is multiplied, color burned, and overlaid. A low opacity blue solid finishes out the layering.

Shot 03-10 from Group of Six on Vimeo.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Office Lighting Fixes




Here's the latest version of the lighting. With the exception of banding on the main character's forearm, this is looking good.

To get here, I removed all the area lights and replaced the whole set up with directional and point lights. I'm using a lot more light linking so that the background is lit almost entirely separate from the characters. The main character also has his very own subtle rim light so he pops out just a bit more. Apart from the visual improvement, the render time has also been cut by 30%.

Update: Here's a clip with the new lighting

Office Light Test from Group of Six on Vimeo.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Lighting Tests

While 3D lighting certainly isn't my forte, it seems that in my thesis group I'm the one with the most experience with it. So I've been tasked to develop the initial lighting set up for our film's three sets.

Just to give you some background on the project, I am working with 7 other artists. There is Dave, our producer, Ryan and Rory, our directors, John, our lead animation and character development, James, lead story and art direction, Brian, lead simulation and effects, and Kevin, our sound designer. This many people working together on a single animation is unprecedented at our school, so its kind of a big deal.

The story goes like this: Gabe is starting his first day at the Department of Human Fate, a company located in a city in the clouds, which watches over people on earth to ensure that they die at the right moment. Gabe is assigned to watch a construction worker, but things start going wrong when Gabe has trouble figuring out how to control his subject. In the end he learns a lesson about determination and trying your best.

With that said, check out some renders. Here we have the first lighting set up using mentalray's physical sun and sky and some area lights to fill in the background. I took the render into photshop and bumped up the saturation a bit and multiplied an occlusion over it:

My companions complained that despite the increase in saturation, we were losing a lot of color and our characters were looking sickly.
So we decided to totally ditch the physical sun and sky because it was too much of a pain to try and work around it.

So I worked on the lighting a bit and rendered out a scene. This still needs a boat load of work before we can call it done.


Office Light Test from Group of Six on Vimeo.

And since vimeo butchered the color, here's a screen cap: