I’ve been working on a fairly basic model of an otter that I could “paint” orange and black for various video projects – and have it roughed out now.
The next step is to add some colour to it…

Where I put my online stuff…..
I’ve been mucking about with some more models for my “big idea” and produced a little scene with another short animation a while back. I haven’t rendered the animation for posting (as it was just to try out a few things), but here’s a frame grab from near the end…
You might recognize some of the models – Mammoth (which was also turned into a young one without the tusks), Pinching Beetle, and some of my lame trees. The big green thing is my first attempt at a “jade boulder”. The mountains are the Seven Sisters taken from an exceptional photograph from Bob Wall Photography (thanks, Bob!) and although it just looks like blue sky in the background, it’s actually a clouds time lapse that runs in the animations.
I’m starting to flesh out a few ideas of how my larger project might work so there may be a few glimpses of those ideas from time to time…
One of the big hurdles with these types of projects is render times – particularly for animations – so I’m trying to always keep the complexities in mind and find efficient solutions.
I used the Fluffy Bunny from the course and a couple of trees I created in Blender for other projects/ideas in my “Happy Easter” wish for 2017:
I had no idea when I started this Blender process that it could be used for still images as well as the animations that (are still) my main goal…
Happy Easter, everyone!!!
As I’ve been learning Blender and the art of 3d Modeling (and by extension, animation using the models I’m building), some have wondered what (if anything) the master plan is. I have to admit that I don’t really have a really good answer for that. I originally started out with the goal of learning how to create an animate a small character or object that I could insert into my more traditional videos.
However, I think I’ve fallen down the rabbit hole! Every time I learn something new in Blender, the possibilities of what can be built/done with these tools stretch out a little further – and all of these other, bigger ideas come flooding into my head.
Without really giving anything away, here’s a render of an model that I roughed together later in the day yesterday…
I still have to work out some of the hair details to become more efficient (the render times on this frame with “particle hair” added and the samples turned up to 512 was around 8 minutes). I have a few ideas of how to speed up my renders but have to learn a bit more yet… But it’s a start.
I also was working on this model the other day. It started out as a picture of a pinching beetle that had landed on my RV window while I was at the Holloway Bar Place Mine and turned into this:
I rendered this out to a transparent background – and even rendered a 250 frame animation to try out a few things, but haven’t figured out how to render a short video in Vegas with a transparent background rather than my usual compositing methods, so I have to learn a bit more about the video editing end of things. It’s actually pretty amazing to think that this stuff can be cranked out in the basement rather than some big animation studio! This is an interesting time to be learning all of this stuff…
I also built this “island in the sky” that I call “floater”. Not sure how this ties into my big ideas but it was a fun exercise.
Every time I do one of these, I learn something! That’s what it’s all about…
I made a timelapse of the past few days at Lakelse Lake, as the winter ice was leaving the lake. Images were taken every 10 minutes from three cameras, which were combined in a panoramic timelapse of the process.
I tried this a year ago and abandoned it when I got stuck. I tried it again (now that I know a little more) and this is how it came out:
I had an idea to use a Northern Lights time-lapse segment from a whole-sky camera as a moving background/sky – so cranked out this short video to try it out:
It seemed to work fine – and will probably show up in other work (after a bunch of tweaking). Since I have probably more images that could be made into timelapses than anyone else anywhere (probably between 15 and 20 million) this concept and its derivations could be handy…
For those Blender people out there, this was created by importing an “image as a plane” in Blender with a short AVI file for the media file, and then subdividing the plane a bunch of times and reshaping it into a dome. Lighting and camera placement was a little tricky but that’s all part of the learning process.
Well, I added a pretty sad looking bush, turned up a few of the settings (samples and resolution mainly) and rendered out this image:
(click on the image to view full size)
So, now I’m on to the next section – a gothic castle of some sort – so buildings should be interesting! I’m hoping we get more into texture mapping and things like that.
I’m actually starting to feel a bit “conversant” with this software – although I’m still only scratching the surface. But I am having a great deal of fun doing this! It’s a great way to spend the first part of my retirement and excited to see what I will be able to build with this new “toolkit”.