Last edited by Gare; 11 April 2014 at 02:31 PM.
Looks great.
Larry a.k.a wizard509
Never give up. You will never fail, but you may find a lot of ways that don't work.
Thanks, Larry. It's important, so an artist has more options with the Extrude tool, not to think of the face of the extrusion as the face of the final object. With the book, it's the bottom side of the shapes that gives the extrusion its distinctive look. A lot of times in real life, the profile can be more interesting and visually descriptive than the portrait.
-g
I like that. My imagination is begining to churn!
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
My current Xara software: Designer Pro 365 12.6
Good Morning Sunshine.ca | Good Morning Sunshine Online(a weekly humorous publication created with XDP and exported as a web document) | Angelize Online resource shop | My Video Tutorials | My DropBox |
Autocorrect: It can be your worst enema.
It looks great, the Extrude tool deserves much more attention than usual
Conceptually, you can also attain a marvelously interesting "3D" extruded shape if ytou think about things you see in real life that are essentially planar, with a little depth added.
Example?
I've attached the original, but unextruded Xara file here to prompt some creative variations and stuff. :)
What else do we see around us that is either "flat" in its construction, or could be represented artistically as a flat extruded shape?
I think I did this in the mid 1990s, when my modeling tools were primitive compared to now. I didn't have anything to generate tree leaves, so I said to myself, "Self? The motif of this piece is cartoonish, so make the house and the trees flat, like cheaply painted stage props."
Sometimes, working with one hand tied behind your back forces your ingenuity to step forward and guide you to a result you might not have expected, but is pleasing to yourself and others as well.
I think that if I were to go back, and replace the trees and the house with more dimensional ones, the piece would lose some visual interest.
My Best,
Gary
Cool Gare Attitude can make a huge dfference.
Larry a.k.a wizard509
Never give up. You will never fail, but you may find a lot of ways that don't work.
How about some bread? Imagine if you could easily map some textures to an extrusion!What else do we see around us that is either "flat" in its construction, or could be represented artistically as a flat extruded shape?
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
My current Xara software: Designer Pro 365 12.6
Good Morning Sunshine.ca | Good Morning Sunshine Online(a weekly humorous publication created with XDP and exported as a web document) | Angelize Online resource shop | My Video Tutorials | My DropBox |
Autocorrect: It can be your worst enema.
Frances, I love it.
This has developed from a Xara Art Gallery personal post into a thread on extruding approaches and techniques.
Might be worth migrating this to a different thread or renaming it. I started it. Any idea where this might go on tg, and what we should call it?
Here's a (painstaking, time-consuming) pic of a chicken trying to fly (and succeeding) before the time is right. You need and egg timer, but seriously, the wings are posed and angled shapes extruded and staged in front and behind one another and the egg itself is just an oval with a multi-stage elliptical gradient.And then a feathered (another opportunity for a pun here) Bleach mode shape to represent the cache lighting.
The clouds are a photo. I'm good, but not that good. :)
-g
I think the Xara Graphics Chat forum would be a good place. As to what to call the thread I'm not sure, perhaps something along the lines of "Extrusions: Approaches and Techniques"
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
My current Xara software: Designer Pro 365 12.6
Good Morning Sunshine.ca | Good Morning Sunshine Online(a weekly humorous publication created with XDP and exported as a web document) | Angelize Online resource shop | My Video Tutorials | My DropBox |
Autocorrect: It can be your worst enema.
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