Title: Infinite Waves Post by: Chillheimer on July 20, 2014, 11:02:54 AM Hi everyone!
(and congrats Kalle for your own space here, finally!) I have a question: How do you use Infinite Waves correctly? As soon as I switch it on, the screen turns black, no matter what type/period I've added.. What am I doing wrong? Cheers, Chilli Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: Dinkydau on July 21, 2014, 02:35:18 PM You need to give numbers for at least brightness, otherwise the brightness is 0 everywhere.
Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: simon.snake on July 21, 2014, 08:20:32 PM In the fractal (http://www.fractalforums.com/index.php?action=gallery;sa=view;id=16149) I entered for the competition this year, I used the following wave values:
Code: B 1033 0 This palette worked well with the closeness of the location as it passed close to a few minibrots. Feel free to try this out in your own renderings. Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: Chillheimer on July 21, 2014, 09:30:09 PM ahhh... brightness... here comes the light! :)
thank you, guys! Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: youhn on August 16, 2014, 05:24:13 PM I just started to explore the Infinite Wave function in Kalles and I found it to be kind of hard (so very nice to work with, since challanges are a good thing). But it's too complex to predict, it really calls for a kind of preview. When the waves are only applied to the actual fractal, it's impossible to see what happens on other zoom levels.
I've been using some math tools like octave + gnuplot to see how additions of waves interact with eachother. It's not the most easy or most clear way to do it though. What are your methods to create infinite waves? Just trial and error? Make use of number sequences? Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: Kalles Fraktaler on August 16, 2014, 06:55:03 PM Just trial and error :)
The Brightness is set to a lower value than the others, and it defines the density of the colors. The others are just some numbers, it always turns out nicely but get kind of the same all the time with very colorful colors. So now I am back to the palette again which can be set to pale, pastelle, neon or whatever I like. Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: youhn on August 19, 2014, 08:05:53 PM I used to make stripes manually, projected on palette with long waves of color to get things like this:
(http://i.imgur.com/iKBpzW0.jpg) The stripes are just visible in white, in the least dense areas. Lately I found a way to simulate this with the Inifite Wave function, which also dims the overall saturation. Just use big numbers for the period of brightness and hue (like B = 2048, H = 1536) and a serie of small numbers for the saturation ( S=1, S=3, S=5, S=7, S=8, S=9, S=11). Combine this set of waves with a low value for Divide Iteration like 0.02. This will produce pictures like this: (http://i.imgur.com/Ruccsv1.jpg) (Kalles Fraktaler file attached to this post) These are ideal for color cycling movies, since it created a semi-random texture which will accent the movement. Instead of the illusion of glowing colors, the actual movement becomes more visible. With even higher ratios between B/H and S, the bands will almost become invisible. This will result in an averaged saturation of about 50%, and also some interference (depending on the location in the fractal). Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: laser blaster on August 19, 2014, 08:41:59 PM I like to make my color palettes in GIMP. I would make a very long and skinny image (like 2048x16 px), paint on some colors, then read in a line of pixels in my program as a palette.That way, you have full aesthetic control over the result, and can layer in high-frequency waves on top of long gradients as you please. Unfortunately, KF doesn't have any way to import a palette from an image
Title: Re: Infinite Waves Post by: youhn on August 23, 2014, 01:30:05 PM I've also tried the gimp, but did not really feel right for me. I want the waves to visualize the repeating stuff in the fractal sets. With the right value for color density (divide iteration), spiral things in the Mandelbrot can look like bubbles. Another one with the method to dim the saturation (big values for B and H, very low for S): (http://fc09.deviantart.net/fs71/i/2014/234/e/f/flow_mask_green_by_jeroensnake-d7w8b9u.jpg) Source: http://jeroensnake.deviantart.com/art/Flow-mask-green-477398802 See attached file for original location. The result was sheared, stretched and sharpened with the Gimp ... |