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Lava Lamp: An American Classic :)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
gray
Did that cardboard ship fly? It looks like Flash Gordon's.
As for clowns, we have enough clowns on the public stage now. More are not needed.
You are the cornucopia of the creative art world.
I also post things from my 26 years as a computer artist. I'll look prolific no matter which way you slice it, Graham!
You are too kind, Sir.
Oh, and thanks for adopting TalkGraphics' guidelines...to stay non-political... and only talking about clowns on the public stage, without pointing out any political party or any political candidate.
Like Donald Trump.
I believe that I used trueSpace back in the early 1990s to create the lava lamp.
Attachment 111670
I think I've used the model several times since.
My Best,
Gary
Re: Lava Lamp: An American Classic :)
The lava lamp is quite brilliant ... I have Truespace 7.6 ... Not a clue how to use it. Now there another program that's absolutely not intuitive. Every time I get into it, I turn it off in disgust after 20 minutes fumbling about.
I miss my old lava lamp ... could really relax watching it.
2 Attachment(s)
Re: Lava Lamp: An American Classic :)
Quote:
Originally Posted by
ss-kalm
The lava lamp is quite brilliant ... I have Truespace 7.6 ... Not a clue how to use it. Now there another program that's absolutely not intuitive. Every time I get into it, I turn it off in disgust after 20 minutes fumbling about.
I miss my old lava lamp ... could really relax watching it.
What was odd, Keith, is that the Lava Lamp worked on a very simple principle: wax was suspended in a fluid, a heat source (a very inefficient light bulb) was sent up from the base, and blobs were created, self-illuminated by refraction (I think) and the colour of the wax.
I fought and fought with trueSpace, and never really grokked it, but it was the only affordable modeler that had raytracing for shadows at the time, so I put up with it until I'd saved all my pennies and dimes and bought Cinema 4D.
To make the lava lamp, I exported a profile from Xara as an Illustrator file and swept the profile (it's called lathing, like in pottery) around a hypothetical axis. The cord is another profile swept along a path, and the on/off switch is a simple extrude.
The lava itself is a collection of metaballs; most modelers today offer metaballs...I think Blender does. And then I animated the blobs for a short video.
Attachment 111675
I've attached a Xara file of the profiles I used in case anyone wants to export the paths in Illustrator format and use them in a modeling program. To the best of my knowledge, only Illustrator files are supported in the modeling world...pity.
My Best,
Gary
Re: Lava Lamp: An American Classic :)
Keith, in passing, the Lava Lamp was invented back in '63 and is still marketed by Mathmos, Poole, UK, down the road from me.
Acorn