Title: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: The Rev on October 06, 2010, 12:15:30 AM I'm interested in how each of you goes about the process of creating a new piece. I ask because I tend to just start picking stuff, tinkering with parameters, trying this or that, and allowing the "where I'm going with this" to just reveal itself as I go. Only once have I started a fractal with some idea of what I wanted the end result to be.
Is this the case with the rest of you? Or do you work towards a goal you envision before you begin? The Rev Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: Sockratease on October 06, 2010, 12:41:27 AM Hope you don't mind me moving this. It's better off here (Meet & Greet is mostly for intro's and such).
As for the question - The closest I come to planning ahead is a color scheme I'd like to use. The rest is just Zen. I often try an idea, or try to make something similar to something I saw elsewhere, but get so sidetracked that I wind up doing something wholly other than what I intended anyhow! Or I'll try to see what happens by plugging favorite numbers into odd places, just because I like the numbers! (primes, pi, e, etc...) I can sometimes make what I want, but rarely. Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: Thunderwave on October 06, 2010, 01:19:09 AM I get a concept in my mind about a program I know, and then I try it out.
Apophysis: I usually think about which formula I want to explore and then I test its possibilities. 3D is very new to me so I just explore all it can do. I have to have an idea in mind in order for me to work it through, otherwise I feel I am wasting time. This doesn't mean I always get what I want, but mostly I am surprised by what I get. Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: lkmitch on October 06, 2010, 01:46:27 AM I generally have an idea in mind--I very rarely start from "scratch." Interestingly, the images for which I had a fully-formed plan are generally not as good as my more "free form" images. I guess I tend to overthink things. :)
Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: Wel lEnTaoed on October 19, 2010, 04:17:02 PM I tend to "go with the flow" Which BTW tends to distract me from original idea.
Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: pfrancke on April 02, 2011, 06:16:17 AM always such a thing is limited by what one knows.... the more you know the more options there are. When you know nothing, then start with what you like and play with it.
Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: ker2x on April 02, 2011, 09:18:58 PM i write code, i patch code, i explore and improve algorithms, i test stuff, i try to understand things.
The fractals rendering i post here is an incidental product derived from the coding process, a by-product ;D Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: heavenriver on April 10, 2011, 08:53:09 PM I go by instinct most of the time. I have some guidelines I can follow (like starting with formulas I know well and whose effects are more or less familiar to me), but I simply can't sit still, so I keep exploring all the time. That's a rather scrambled way, but I've learned a lot with this fractal empiricism!
Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: DarkBeam on April 28, 2011, 06:02:37 PM Me = randomness ;D ;D ;D
Anyway lately I posted images made while testing my formulas if they came up good :police: Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: Xazo-Tak on September 05, 2011, 06:53:25 AM I tend to experiment with different settings to work out what makes awesome and what makes beiber.
Title: Re: Creating a new Fractal piece Post by: _db_ on October 13, 2011, 03:39:40 AM I start with a greyscale gradient and usually with an image that has previously caught my eye. Then I play with parameters, colouring formulas, and sometimes the fractal formula looking for interesting shapes. Then I crop, rotate, zoom, etc. to try and get an interesting composition. This is the most time consuming part for me, I may many hours and sometimes days before finding something worthwhile. Once the basic composition is there, I try to embellish and strengthen it. I may add layers with different colouring formulas to add texture to the shapes or visual interest to the areas around the basic shapes, to add visual flow and emphasis. Then I experiment with colours until I arrive at a workable palette. Finally I refine the colouring by adjusting individual colours. I often save quite a few interim results, some will have certain attractive elements that I try to combine in the final piece. Usually most of my time is spent trying to find the basic shapes and composition. When I find nice shapes I sometimes do a series of variations. |