Hey everyone! I make videos of random stuff, from music animations to interesting coding experiments! If you're interesting in contacting me, the best option would be to send me an email using the email provided below. Have a great day!
Those are possibly the most realistic photos I’ve ever seen from 3D rendering software. Especially that shot of a bedroom. I’d believe that was a real photo.
I love this whole video. the whole idea of "reposition the fake camera inside of the fake real camera" is amazing. and as a programmer, the "enable dispersion" ... "disable dispersion" is super relatable
You've gone so far down in the hole to write a video documentary about what you have learned so far! Imaging make a video while your computer is still rendering? That's torturing!
You should add more! I’d love to see this become a full blown project. Things like growing grass that can be eaten, revolving animals depending on their habitat, predators. It would be absolutely insane.
Now all you need is a real fake analog camera that uses this fake analog camera add on for blenders camera, and then once thats done,byou can use AI to make a photo, print that and then use the fake-real-fake digotal camera to take a photo of a fake, real photo, and create fake history..
I WOULD LOVE a video made for the people that are not used to 3D design but would love to play around with the camera, people like regular designers, photographers and the rest of us peasants :D
ok this is the highest quality best "tutorial" I've ever seen in my life It's like a tutorial and a meme vid fit into one, and unlike most tutorials it's not 5 times longer than necessary
I love using the camera but just wish that there was a version with a wider fov, its so narrow at the moment that you can only capture small scenes or you have to move really far away with the camera wich makes the scene look a bit flat
What if instead of increasing exposure of the blender camera, you increased exposure by opening the aperature for multiple frames and then overlaying all of the frames together to a single image using multiply or add? Then you could have different exposure as well as the other thing i cant remember, to balance them for either high speed photos like you have or long exposure effects
A question because it sounds like you have a programming background too: How do you feel about the practicality of doing something like this with nodes instead of straight code, having done it? My inclination is to think that nodes are fine for simpler stuff but organizing and reasoning about anything complex with nodes sound like a nightmare. I probably tend to go too far in the other direction because the moment I face having a minor node jungle I have a tendency to go "..screw it, Python it is."