The Dam Ice and New Snowy Wallpaper


Two Sundays ago, I took a short jaunt back to the dam – the same dam that I photographed earlier this year. One can always learn by returning to a place one has photographed before because so much has changed. With its fresh blanket of snow and sub-freezing temperatures, winter had definitely changed the feeling of this place.

The water raging out of the bottom of the dam seemed fiercer, wilder. Strange things can happen below freezing, such as the downright weird ice formations on some of the rocks in shallow water. In general, the water held uncountable photographic opportunities. Ice fragments on the surface reminded me of lily pads as they swirled above the deep blue. Heading back up the steps to leave, I snapped a photo of my footsteps in the snow on the narrow wooden stairs. Check out The Dam Ice and Snow album to see.

Snowy Sight Iceflow

Then yesterday, I was experimenting (playing around) with the cutout filter in Photoshop. The cutout filter, for those who haven’t used it before, makes an image look more basic and angular, almost animated. For a time, I was satisfied with IMG1337 (I hadn’t named it yet), but I wondered what it would look like merged with my favorite christmas background, Snowy Sight.

After some more experimentation (see a pattern here?), I was pleasantly surprised with the result. This new wallpaper is more dynamic and visually interesting than the old Snowy Sight versions. The angular shapes in the background mesh well with the snowflake shapes. I call this new wallpaper Snowy Sight Iceflow, and it’s available in various sizes.

Enjoy, and Happy Festivus.


Photos from this trip are in this album. All photos in the Gallery can be used as desktop wallpapers because they are high resolution (1920×1440).



New Widescreen Wallpaper – Indigo Island


Yesterday, a friend of mine gave me the push I needed. I had been tinkering with the sequel to the Sol Over Silk Ocean wallpaper for some time. A friend of mine mentioned that she liked some of the 3D wallpapers I had created with Bryce and asked me if I could create a new version of Sol Over Silk Ocean. That bit of encouragement spurred me into launching the somewhat-unstable Bryce 6 app and experimenting with some of its atmospheric settings. Showing off some of the capabilities of the program, I sent her stunning red sunsets, strange alien skies, and eventually settled on a more natural morning-violet color. I struggled with changing the water to blue until I realized that the violet color was simply a result of the sun’s lowa distance from the horizon. In the original wallpaper, the atmosphere was artificially slanted toward a yellow color, but this new wallpaper would be more natural and perhaps less intense.

Impulsive Creativity

Indigo Island

Now looking at a decent sky, I created a small island in the silk ocean, and I made it out of transparent blue metal for no particular reason. I’ve always been a fan of Bryce’s transparent metals – though not to a geeky level – and in this situation the result was quite unique. But I wasn’t satisfied yet, of course. I spent much longer creating and refining the island contours. I couldn’t seem to get the southern contour quite right, but I rendered the entire 4 megapixel (2560×1600) image anyway and closed the project for the day.

Defining the Problem

Today, I asked myself this question:

Why procrastinate about this? How long do I really think it will take to fix this annoying contour problem?

I asked a question to define the problem for myself. By asking myself this question, I realized it probably wouldn’t take that long, so I delved in again. Fifteen minutes later, I finally reached a pleasing form. If you’ve been following the “What I’m Doing” status messages in the sidebar, you would have seen when I made those “minor changes.” The newly added “What I’m Doing” section is powered by the ever-popular Twitter.com – a useful service for providing short, up-to-the-minute text updates to people. If you’ve been following these Twitter updates, you also know how long I waited for the 3D rendering to complete: about 9 hours. Patience is indeed a virtue, especially in 3D graphics.

After some tweaking with the curve adjustment layer in Photoshop, I was pleased with the result. You see, with a little help from a friend, a decision to define the problem, and some patience, I can now present to you: Indigo Island.

Enjoy.