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well... part of a character I've started work on. If you happen to know who this fur may belong to or are the owner of said fur, I have a few questions for ya.
How does that look? Too much color? Too little? Need more white? Does the prismatic effect need work? Are the prismatic colors right?
I've been working on and off on this thing for the last couple of days trying to force Maya to work properly and came across the programs many, many, MANY shortcomings as an old version. I'm just happy it cooperated enough with me tonight to get this far. Hopefully I'll stop losing half the model soon.
How does that look? Too much color? Too little? Need more white? Does the prismatic effect need work? Are the prismatic colors right?
I've been working on and off on this thing for the last couple of days trying to force Maya to work properly and came across the programs many, many, MANY shortcomings as an old version. I'm just happy it cooperated enough with me tonight to get this far. Hopefully I'll stop losing half the model soon.
Category Flash / Miscellaneous
Species Wolf
Size 320 x 240px
File Size 8.37 MB
Hmm.... Vrghr MIGHT have a clue who that fur belongs to! *grins*
The prismatic color shifts look VERY nice! Only suggestion wuff might make in that regard is, the spectrum seems to be tilted a bit toward to 'cooler' end, with more green-blue-violet shades, and may be lacking a bit of the 'warmer' orange, yellow, red hues.
As far as the mix between the white base fur and the color shifts, that would depend on where the colors were playing across the figure's form. Most of the body should be white, normally, with a play of colored highlights. In brighter light, the colors become more distinct and numerous. Less so with dimmer lights. And since "prism effects" are involved, the color hues would be factors on the color of the light hitting the fur.
Hope this was some help!
The prismatic color shifts look VERY nice! Only suggestion wuff might make in that regard is, the spectrum seems to be tilted a bit toward to 'cooler' end, with more green-blue-violet shades, and may be lacking a bit of the 'warmer' orange, yellow, red hues.
As far as the mix between the white base fur and the color shifts, that would depend on where the colors were playing across the figure's form. Most of the body should be white, normally, with a play of colored highlights. In brighter light, the colors become more distinct and numerous. Less so with dimmer lights. And since "prism effects" are involved, the color hues would be factors on the color of the light hitting the fur.
Hope this was some help!
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