Re: [Fractint] AOTD
. Animation of Jim Muth FOTD (Dawn of the Stars) December 29, 2008 is posted: http://www.fractal-animation.net/vid/dark.zip 20 Meg download These complex formulas are interesting. Start out looking like a regular Mandelbrot, then get weird as you go in. This one even has a Cantor Strip (I think that's what it is - it doesn't change if you zoom in to it). A queshun for The Maestro if I may: When you post these moderately deep ones (e+12 etc) do you find it at that depth or start with the parent and zoom in until you find something good? .
JackOfTradeZ@comcast.net wrote:
Animation of Jim Muth FOTD (Dawn of the Stars) December 29, 2008 is posted: http://www.fractal-animation.net/vid/dark.zip 20 Meg download
Wonderful, and the music goes well with it. :-)
JackOfTradeZ@comcast.net wrote:
Animation of Jim Muth FOTD (Dawn of the Stars) December 29, 2008 is posted: http://www.fractal-animation.net/vid/dark.zip
Always enjoy seeing another one of your animations !!! I do have a question, what is your criteria when choosing the music for some of your AOTDs ?? And where do you get the music ?? Sincerely, P.N.L. ------------------------------------------------- http://home.att.net/~Paul.N.Lee/PNL_Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
On 2009-01-06 17:35, Paul N. Lee wrote:
I do have a question, what is your criteria when choosing the music for some of your AOTDs ?? And where do you get the music ??
I can't tell from the question if you think the soundtrax is good or if it sucks, but I'll answer anyway. Sometimes, rarely, I design an animation to fit a soundtrak, like a classical music piece. Usually, I watch the viddie first then pick or make a soundtrak to fit it. In this case, I first had to change the colors. Some people like washed-out pastels, I prefer intense colors and sharp contrast. I actually used a map from a large zip file downloaded from your site! A few test frames looked ok, so I rendered the whole sequence. When I viewed it, it had an unexpected dark "gothic" appearance, hence the name change also; there are no "dawn" or "stars" now! I have a collection of audio CD's, hemisync tones, binaural beats, etc., "brainwave" and "meditation" stuff from years ago when I was experimenting with it. Also collections of sound effects, sounds from old games, etc. lotsa stuff. I also rip audio from DVD, like the 2001 space odyssey sound I used for the deepest Mandelbrot zooms. Then I can massage any sounds thru software (audacity, nero wave editor, etc), stretching it, changing tone, adding echo and reverb, playing backwards, superimposing, etc. limited only by imagination. So the one for this viddie is a highly altered slice from "2001" overlayed on a white noise + hemisync tone, then added some echo and reverb. I think it fits nice. There is another factor. When you view an animated fractal, you think you are seeing an orderly progression of images differing only slightly. What you are actually viewing, is chaos! An evolving dynamic complex system. I have observed that almost any sound will go with any animation, if only the "moods" match. JoTz
Lloyd Garrick "Jack Of TraDeZ" wrote:
I can't tell from the question if you think the soundtrax is good or if it sucks...
Actually, I thought it fit this animation quite well, which is one of the reasons I asked my questions. And I appreciate the time you spent in the detailed explanation, for it confirmed my first impression of the music. When I first watched and listened to your video, I thought it sounded very much like what was used in the 2001 movie, the part where Dave encounters another monolith in orbit around Jupiter and finds himself suddenly traveling through a tunnel of colored light (which was fractal-like in a few ways). Thank you for the answers, and also for sharing all of these AOTD animations with us. :-) Sincerely, P.N.L. ------------------------------------------------- http://home.att.net/~Paul.N.Lee/PNL_Fractals.html http://www.Nahee.com/Fractals/
participants (5)
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alex dukay -
Jack Of TraDeZ -
JackOfTradeZ@comcast.net -
Maryetta Campbell -
Paul N. Lee