PDA

View Full Version : This is awesome.



Atty
October 10th, 2007, 12:41 PM
http://img128.imageshack.us/img128/9614/panaramafollowingthesunxy2.jpg

Beautiful.

rossmum
October 10th, 2007, 12:43 PM
I concur.

kungpow
October 10th, 2007, 12:46 PM
Indeed.

Patrickssj6
October 10th, 2007, 12:48 PM
Hmm....Terragen?

Good nontheless. :)

Kornman00
October 10th, 2007, 12:48 PM
That, is madness :o

atomicpower93
October 10th, 2007, 12:48 PM
oooo the colours!

Classicthunder
October 10th, 2007, 02:31 PM
Backgrounded.

How did you find it and who shot it? Brilliant idea.

Dr Nick
October 10th, 2007, 02:45 PM
I bet you could cut out each piece, stick it on one of those circular things, and spin it and it woud look awesome!

Pooky
October 10th, 2007, 04:11 PM
I'd like it better without the black bars, but I agree.

Rob Oplawar
October 10th, 2007, 04:40 PM
yes, absolutely gorgeous. I wonder where those pics were taken- must have been a really high latitude. [eidt: or low latitude i guess] Either that, or the pics were not taken at linearly distributed times and the photographer skipped the night altogehter. Eirther way, it makes for a really nice effect.

n00b1n8R
October 10th, 2007, 04:52 PM
:ox10^:awesome:

Hurrvish
October 10th, 2007, 04:55 PM
Looks like Terragen

Jelly
October 10th, 2007, 05:07 PM
What Atty said.

Tweek
October 10th, 2007, 05:13 PM
i don't get whats so awesome about it.
i mean it's pretty and all, but yey?

Con
October 10th, 2007, 07:09 PM
yes, absolutely gorgeous. I wonder where those pics were taken- must have been a really high latitude. [eidt: or low latitude i guess] Either that, or the pics were not taken at linearly distributed times and the photographer skipped the night altogehter. Eirther way, it makes for a really nice effect.
it looks CG-ish, probably terragen like others have said. btw, anyone here have terragen 2? It's so hard to use :\

Syuusuke
October 10th, 2007, 07:40 PM
Assuming it's not CG, it could have been taken in either North or South Pole, where it is always night or always day (apparently for this image, it's an "always day" type). It looks like each frame is a 2 hour interval (12 frames, one cycle of a day apparently, refer: frame 1 and 12)