Search Books
Internet QoS: Architectures… Data on the Web: From Relat…

Advanced RenderMan: Creating CGI for Motion Pictures (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Computer Graphics)

Author Anthony A. Apodaca, Larry Gritz
Publisher Morgan Kaufmann
Category Computers
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
75.61 88.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $0.45

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1558606181
ISBN-139781558606180
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,310,118
CategoryComputers
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

More powerful and inspiring than the superheroes it moves on the big screen, the RenderMan 3-D graphics engine pushes animation toward the photorealistic as anyone who has seen A Bug's Life, The Iron Giant, or the Toy Story can attest.Advanced RenderMan, written by two long-time employees of Pixar Animation and early participants who helped define the RenderMan standard, is a clear, concise, and technical exploration of this computer graphics and animation rendering tool.

The first section introduces RenderMan, computer graphics concepts, and mathematics, followed by a section on "Scene Description." This includes chapters on "Describing Models and Scenes in RenderMan" and "Handling Complexity in Photorealistic Scenes."

Sections 3 and 4, "Shading," and "Tricks of the Trade" supply the meat of the book and make it worth the cost of admission. These sections include examples and insight from not only a technical perspective but also a cinematic one. The chapter "Storytelling Through Lighting" should be required reading for beginning computer animation artists.

There are numerous color plates, including some rendering tests from Toy Story. These show the same scene (Andy's room) using different lighting and color palettes, each suggesting a different time of day.

Given the difficulty of the book's subject, 3-D artists or animators with limited technical chops, amateurs, or hobbyists might be better served by something more general. This is, however, an outstanding reference for CG technical directors or anyone with experience in graphics and 3-D programming. It is filled with coding examples used to create RenderMan shaders and case studies citing which techniques were used to create a specific look in, for example, Toy Story or A Bug's Life.

The book has no accompanying CD-ROM, but the publisher maintains a Web site from which code snippets and examples can be downloaded. At first, this may seem inconvenient and merely a way to cut production costs, but it's actually an excellent way to keep the examples current. The field of computer graphics and animation is moving at the speed of light, and the examples and tutorials must move with it. But have no fear--RenderMan is here. --Mike Caputo

The Good Web Site Guide 2006: The Completely Revised, …
View
The Pentium Microprocessor
View
Advanced Intel Microprocessors: 80286, 80386, And 80486
View
Differential Equations: Matrices and Models
View
Digital Experiments: Emphasizing Troubleshooting (Merr…
View
Data Structures for Computer Information Systems
View
The Little LISPer, Third Edition
View
Inside Networks
View
Computer Graphics Using Open GL (2nd Edition)
View