It actually is my third collab and I'm very pleased with the outcome. The original concept was made by *ChrisCold. The overall appearance changed several times during the last two months. *ChrisCold was responsible for and middleground and I did the background. But both worked on the whole pic, improving little things etc.
What is it? Ask your imagination...
Wallpaperpack 288x900 3360x1050 3840x1200 You can crop other sizes out of them if you want.
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So hi; I really love this piece. Way better than anything I'll ever be able to do myself, hence the high number of stars given. Still, I just wanted to offer this critique not of your technique, but of the content itself which is astronomically questionable (at least slightly.) Better than most, please don't get me wrong... and I understand that without the nebulae, the artwork would have seemed emptier... but in terms of raw physics, what is displayed isn't realistic (outside the glass, that is.)
Basically, Nebulae exist on a much grander scale than solar systems and planets do. 10x, 100x, 1000x, 10000x larger typically, and at the scale of an individual planet, the gas is so fine and dispersed that it would barely be able to be picked up with star-light streaming through it, much less be so ... I don't know... viscous as seen here. Granted, stars and planets are born within densely packed nebulae, but as they come into fruition, they scour out a hollow within it and then when the sun 'ignites' (for lack of a better term) the gas and dust is pushed out of the system (mostly.) We see this in 'bowshocks' surrounding stars still in close proximity to nebulae all the time.
So yeah, beautiful work; just a science hiccup and not one I'd suggest doing anything about really. This critique is just offered to inspire future works of course. Feel free to keep this private and for your own sole benefit!
I scrolled past all comments so they would not affect my impression.
I see this as a commander of some form stepping out onto a viewing platform. He seeks an answer to a dilemma, in the view beyond the glass. He asks the silence eternity of space to guide him. His subordinates await his decision. I have the impression that it's a moment of peace, but chaos waits nearby. However, I may have just seen one too many science fiction flicks.
Mein Lieblings Dual Moitor Desktop Hintergrund, manchmal lasse ich PC einfach an um zu träumen das ich grad ausn Fenster einer Raumstation sehe beim einschlafen
Basically, Nebulae exist on a much grander scale than solar systems and planets do. 10x, 100x, 1000x, 10000x larger typically, and at the scale of an individual planet, the gas is so fine and dispersed that it would barely be able to be picked up with star-light streaming through it, much less be so ... I don't know... viscous as seen here. Granted, stars and planets are born within densely packed nebulae, but as they come into fruition, they scour out a hollow within it and then when the sun 'ignites' (for lack of a better term) the gas and dust is pushed out of the system (mostly.) We see this in 'bowshocks' surrounding stars still in close proximity to nebulae all the time.
So yeah, beautiful work; just a science hiccup and not one I'd suggest doing anything about really. This critique is just offered to inspire future works of course. Feel free to keep this private and for your own sole benefit!
Keep up the good work!
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