TITLE: The Red Balloon NAME: Sherry K. Shaw COUNTRY: USA EMAIL: tenmoons@aol.com TOPIC: Minimalism COPYRIGHT: I SUBMIT TO THE STANDARD RAYTRACING COMPETITION COPYRIGHT. JPGFILE: sks_redb.jpg RENDERER USED: POV-Ray 3.6.1 for Windows TOOLS USED: Photoshop RENDER TIME: 4h 33m 41s HARDWARE USED: Athlon, 1.1 Ghz, 256 mg IMAGE DESCRIPTION: A gray room. An unglazed window. A red balloon. DESCRIPTION OF HOW THIS IMAGE WAS CREATED: The visible floor tiles were built with one of two macros, depending on lighting and position. The tiles in the two closest patches of sunlight are height_fields (drawn with an ancient copy of Photoshop, in order to get an assortment of cracks and wear patterns) intersected with boxes, while the remainder of the visible tiles are boxes with a crackle normal. Each tile was then given a tiny, random bit of rotation around x and/or z, scaling down, and -y translation. (The unseen portions of the floor, walls, and ceiling were built of unadorned blocks of 50% gray.) The stone blocks for the walls were built with a macro that I've been fiddling with, off and on, since the "Desert" competition, that creates a rough block by building a rectangular mesh and then sort of hammering at it. The mortar between the stones in each wall is basically one big wall-sized box with a concrete texture. The main body of the red balloon is a blob. The tail was built from a stack of tiny flattened spheres, with a flattened torus at the end. The main body pigment is a gradient that is very slightly transparent at the widest part of the balloon, where the material is stretched the most. The finish is soft (specular 0.75 roughness 0.06 metallic 0.225) and slightly reflective (0.025, 0.05). The yellow grosgrain curling ribbon is a union of teensy flattened cylinders, kept properly oriented with Reorient_Trans(). The assembled room was filled with a hollow, transparent box of scattering media, in order to get the visible sunbeams. The radiosity is pretty much Radiosity_2Bounce, but with the count, nearest_count, and brightness tweaked up just a bit. I used Photoshop to add the copyright and title to the final image and convert it to JPG. An additional note--I decided to create three entries: a representation of a situation, comprising a bare minimum of objects and colors, that might be considered minimalistic; a depiction of a piece of minimalist art in a museum setting; and an image that, by virtue of the simplicity of both image and code, might itself be considered minimalist art. The resulting entries were, respectively, "The Red Balloon," "Pericynthion," and "Magenta."