TITLE: darkligh NAME: Stephen Lavedas COUNTRY: USA EMAIL: swl7m@virginia.edu TOPIC: Elements COPYRIGHT: I SUBMIT TO THE STANDARD RAYTRACING COMPETITION COPYRIGHT. JPGFILE: darkligh.jpg RENDERER USED: POVRay 3.02 TOOLS USED: Moray 3.0, Lview Pro RENDER TIME: unknown HARDWARE USED: K6-300 64MB IMAGE DESCRIPTION: It's late at night and the lonely crates in a government warehouse are guarded under the ever present spotlights bathing the area. This warehouse hasn't been used in years and the dust is the only company the forgotten crates have. I wonder if the Ark of the Covanent is in one of those boxes. The idea behind this image was that Finite Element Machines (or the pillars that you see) make really interesting shadow and light play. I saw a warehouse seen in a play which sparked my interest. The pillars are FEMs based on the physics description of a group of elements that act like one object. Bridges supports, and cranes make use of FEMs. Also I was trying to see how interesting I could make an image using only one primitive. (boxes) DESCRIPTION OF HOW THIS IMAGE WAS CREATED: The image was modelled in Moray. First I created a large box and subtracted another from it to create a "room" I find light plays better in a room than in the open. Then, I created a pillar and placed four spotlights on the top of it, I then copied it all over (in regular patterns). I created the crate out of box primitives by subtracting three boxes from a fourth and putting another box inside the result. The text is in RubberStamp font and looks for all the world like it was created specifically for this use. The only textures are gray (called blah) there are roughly 21 spotlights in the image. The large bright area in the middle is made from a spotlight in the distance that doesn't interact with the atmosphere. The other spotlights are all atop pillars ad are very tight. The hardest part was getting enough atmosphere I settled for Isotropic with 1.0 transmit and 0.25 filter. The lack of complexity is made up for by the atmosphere (I mean the noir look) in my opinion, as well as the interplay of light and shadow between the spotlights and the pillars.