Posts Tagged ‘dover’

Graphic design – Holy sh**, some colour!

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Hello my poor neglected readers!
I’m here to bring you some colour – for the first time in ages.

This is a flyer I’ve drawn up for my parents’ vineyard (St Imre) – Mum is holding monthly Saturday dinners (I think they’re monthly right Mum??) where she cooks a meal and shares some wine and it’s all good times and awesome food. If you’re in Tassie then you need to get down there, Mum’s cooking is fantastic! And I’m not just biased, even the fussy boyfriend always loves her cooking.  I always have a bunch of things to request whenever I visit, favourites from when I was a kid that I just can’t make myself.
Worth a visit just to try proper Hungarian food – there’s not that many places you can get that in this fair country ;-)

So yeh – this is the flyer I will be printing off which will be available around parts of Tas. It didn’t take me too long as I can’t be my slackie self with this one. I’m sure the design will change over time but Mum loves it so that makes me happy. Yay!
weekend-flyer1up
Here’s a link to the bloggy too. :-D

Well – off to bed now to read my book. Night!

CHOW #196 – Wizard of OZ

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Hi!

All done for this week’s CHOW. I can’t believe I managed to go out Saturday, bum around Sunday, do life drawing today and STILL get this done. Awesome. Oh and I don’t hate it so much either. Omg.

Okay so it’s not fantastic but it’s better than most (all?) my other CHOW entries so I gotta be makin’ some progress. Plus this week’s theme was mega mega awesome.
So onto the drawings…
CHOW#196_kittymeow84

If you can’t tell – I decided to go with a whacked out junkie as my Dorothy. Tehehehehee. WHY? Cos I can. And you gotta think that whoever came up with the whole OZ thing had to be on something. I know it’s not the original but have you SEEN Return to Oz?? Cray-zee. The first one was bad enough.
Some progress pics (Click it to make it big if you so wish)….
CHOW work in progress

And how was life drawing I hear you ask?? FAB. Loved it!! Much better than what I was expecting. I shall show you my results tomorrow and talk about it in more detail.
Until then – BYE!

The Tassie Trip

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

I’m back from my little holiday to Tasmania. Back to work today too. Eurgh. Hehe ;-P
We did a lot of fun things while there and also some relaxing things. I got to catch up on all the developments to the winery – since I last visited, my parents moved out of the old rundown house at the bottom of the property and into the converted winery. Dad raised the roof of the building to allow room for upstairs living quarters. He also moved his wood workshop out into a new purpose-built shed and where it used to belong is now the lounge and dining area.
Not everything is finished yet – the upstairs area only has walls so far – no windows and bare floorboards. Regardless, our bed was still comfy and the silence down there permits a good nights rest – except for when the rooster decides to crow at the ungodly hour of 3am!!
Downstairs is all complete however – the kitchen is fit for commercial use and will also be the kitchen for the cafe. Mum is super happy about having a brand new oven, stove and shiny industrial coffee machine. Essential! The lounge is nice and open and with plenty of space in comparison to the cramped, dark room in the old house. The best bit of the whole new living area is the massive outdoor area! Breakfast and most dinners can be had there as it’s sheltered from the elements. It’s good to sit outside and have breakkie :-D

I took lots of photos this time surprisingly! Which is why I’m actually blogging about this in greater detail. Somewhat unsurprisingly though, my photos are neither a complete documentation of my trip, nor very good. Heh! So I present to you a selection of what I took. These were taken on the Thursday as I wandered around discovering stuff – Jonny was busy in Dad’s workshop playing with the Big Boys Toys.

Some veggies from the greenhouse:
Tassie_Feb182010_0014 Tassie_Feb182010_0010

The killing block (look away if you’re a veggo hehe) and some obligatory grapes
Tassie_Feb182010_0024 Tassie_Feb182010_0045

Jonny working on stuff and my Mum watering the plants
Tassie_Feb182010_0056 Tassie_Feb182010_0068

Cows (or bull to be precise)
Tassie_Feb182010_0084

Tassie_Feb182010_0081

Chickens & Ducks
Tassie_Feb182010_0096

Tassie_Feb182010_0094

Farm things
Tassie_Feb182010_0134

Tassie_Feb182010_0111

Tassie_Feb182010_0109

Flowers and timber
Tassie_Feb182010_0086 Tassie_Feb182010_0117

Bits and pieces from around the house
Tassie_Feb182010_0144 Tassie_Feb182010_0141

And finally, some things from the cellar door.
Tassie_Feb182010_0147 Tassie_Feb182010_0148

So there it is, a small glimpse into my parent’s winery. While there I also helped set up the St Imre website – which is now live and can be seen here: CLICKY. Still ironing a few things out and adding content. The blog is still not fully incorporated to look like the rest of the site. But getting there! You should soon be able to buy wine directly from the site. Yay!

Now it’s back to drawing and testing out how my wonderful new computer copes with some work.
Bye! :-D

The DareDevil is finally printed

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

Happy Aussie Day guys! Hope you’re all suitably relaxing and possibly downing a beer or three. Absolute stunner of a day here in Melbs too. Yeah!

Not doing much here ourselves. Just listening to tunes and chillin out. I made double choc pancakes for breakfast. Yummo. Might go for a ride later also.

Onto some art stuff…..
I finally got the labels printed for my parent’s palinka (the Hungarian name for grappa)….45% alcohol made out of the fermented grape skins left after the pressing. You can make it out of pretty much any fruit though – some people use pears or plums too. Whatever you have an excess of!
There’s two bottle sizes…375ml and 100ml…the label is a bit squeezy on the smallest one…so Mum, if you want the label a bit smaller I can send some over because I still have plenty of paper. :-D
It turned out pretty good I think. Looks great against our exposed brick wall and stainless steel bench (I still LOVE my house so much). That’s some great reflection there that you just can’t fake in Photoshop! Hehehe.

daredevil

Other stuff….I went to my first Melbourne Gra-fight Club meet with the local ConceptArt peeps on Sunday. We bum around in town for a few hours sketching people we see. Lots of lessons to be learnt and cool people to hang with. Here are the results. Pretty blah but they get better as I started getting the hang of the process.
(click the pics to go to my Flickr account if you want to see larger)

bourke st
statelibrary3
statelibrary2
statelibrary
melbcentral
The only one I really like is the profile of the guy with the glasses and the grandpa hat.

And finally something a bit prettier….A cute corset by Maya Hansen – soooo many pretty corsets. Want!! Oh and excuse the deformed head. I suck. ;-)
corset
Seeyas!

signature

Progression

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Right – So I’ve added some wine to the glass. And also inside the bottles. But they went a lot darker than expected when I put the wine inside. It doesn’t actually fill the entire of the bottle but it’s still rendered quite dark.

It took a long time to get the wine looking as dark as this. It’s still not right by a long shot. Very very tricky this! I don’t know if it’s my lights stuffing things up, or the layer of “air” that mirrors the wine glass (which is used to get the glass looking more realistic).

The wine also reflects too much and I have NO idea what those itty bitty little squares are that are turning up. The lights again? I could pick at this alllll day couldn’t I!?

But the good bits are: I looooove the look of the stem and the base of the glass. I made the rim a bit thicker too so it looks nicer around that area. The bottles are looking pretty good at the mo too.

What do you think?

Adding some wine

I’m off to Tassie this weekend too – Just for the weekend, coming back on Tuesday. Shan’t be doing much – Haven’t had time or money to buy things for the press. Not sure when our next trip will be – will have to think about that when we get back to Melbourne :-) I think it’s Mum and Dad’s turn to come up for Christmas. Teehee ;-)

signature

You live and learn

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

….more 3D!

I ditched the last model of the bottle and started again. Shows how much you can learn by re-doing something! I made this bottle to scale as best as I could. The Zork is now a separate layer and the I found out some very interesting things about texturing glass.
It’s all about REFRACTION people! How much light passes through an object and all sorts of mathematical equations which I didn’t really understand, I just copied the numbers. Hehe.

The trickiest to get right was the wine glass. Which, well, isn’t quite right is it? Looks just the tiniest bit odd. I may have to change the shape of it. But I’m pretty happy with it for being a beginner!

New 3D render

NEXT, I fill it with wine! Stay tuned!

signature

My mad 3D skillz

Friday, May 29th, 2009

LOL!
Teehehee.
This is the kind of stuff I am able to do with my minimal knowledge of Lightwave 3D. Mind you, this is pretty easy – a bottle is not hard to do as it is based on a very simple form, the cylinder.

I have been learning 3D on and off at work for the past year or so. Because we’re quite busy most of the time, I very rarely get to sit down and just play for any long period of time. But the past couple of days I did get a bit bored and started this model. My workmate who has been trained properly with Lightwave helped me out. I wanted this done not just for my folio, but for my parents and also just because! :-)
I completely fudged the actual design of the bottle so it’s not quite in proportion in this render – I changed that just today. The next step will be creating a very fancy, expensive looking wine glass to go with it.
Yessss I know it’s not perfect – there are so many factors you have to think about when working with 3D. I really should focus more on scale (Mum do you still have those dimensions for the bottles we use?). Also, I think I will try to make the Zork cap a bit better. Right now it’s just a different texture on the main model of the bottle…I should give it its own separate layer and modify the shape so it looks more like a proper Zork.
As for filling the bottles with wine???? Eeep…that could be tricky! I’ll let you know on that one.

Should I explain the 3D process? It is quite involved! What I said about the basic shapes before – well, everything can be broken down into what in 3D lingo is called primitives. Balls, cubes, prisms, cylinders etc. Lightwave provides these for you and you can start your model by modifying one or more of them. Once you have figured out the basic shapes you need it’s a matter of extruding, beveling and tweaking the object until you have what you want. This might sound easy right? The biggest problem I have found is that there are many different ways you can create the same thing. You might be halfway through a model when all of a sudden you realise that there is a better way to do it. But it’s not like Illustrator or Photoshop where you just Undo or Erase….Noooo….often you have to start again from scratch. For example…I started this model by using the Lathe tool – where you draw out the cross section of half of the model and apply the Lathe setting to it and it makes it 3D. This wasn’t working as I was getting way too many polygons and the model wasn’t smooth.
So I scrapped that after spending more than a couple of hours on it and used the cylinder primitive to bevel it out.

Once you have your model, you then take it into the Layout part of Lightwave. This is the 3D environment you place one or more models in to do your animation and rendering.
I laid out my bottle and added a floor, plus cloned a couple of more bottles. Also, tweaking of the texture is done here as you can get more real-time results. I was able to use some standard textures that come with the program for the glass.
THEN you add your lights (3 point lighting just like in ‘real’ photography) and set your camera.
Hit RENDER and hope for the best!

Now I haven’t even gone into animating or the finer details of texturing. I could write an essay just on how you do the easy stuff (which is all I know) but I don’t want to bore you further.
Right now my skills are very minimal. I have the relationship with Lightwave that I am only scratching the surface of what it can do. If I come across a problem I don’t have the knowledge to find a different way to do it. It’s like swimming in a murky pond – you know there’s so much stuff out there, you just can’t reach it. I guess it’s just being only a part of the way there – I am used to being pretty good at using any graphic software – but 3D is very different and you do need to put in a lot of hours. It’s that much more involved in comparison to 2D.
It’s also a very niche market. Not many people in Australia do it. More people use Maya and 3D Studio Max. I don’t have experience with these. But I find Lightwave fun! I’ve got the hang of the interface and the 3D environment. Of all the programs out there, Lightwave is one of the most affordable (around $1700 which isn’t too much more than some parts of Adobe Creative Suite)…There are free ones out there like Blender which I tried and found terrible.
The technical aspects – yes you do need a slightly more powerful than average computer and a decent graphics card…but it’s not unreasonable. My work Mac has 4GB or RAM and a dual core 2.66Ghz processor and it does pretty good. Render times are the killer – if you’re animating and have a few objects in there, it could take days (yes, DAYS)…but for stills it’s not long at all. This image took about 20 minutes at a pretty high resolution and 7 passes. It’s definitely fun and very very rewarding! Creating stuff in 3D is SO COOL! Hehehee.
wine render

Phew – that was a long post. I hope you don’t mind my rambles. Please let me know what you think of the image and any thoughts on 3D! :-D

signature