Here is a WIP shot of the headpiece I'm working on for the Elder Titan. The item is based on a dastar/turban of an old Sikh Warrior, I'm still in doubt if I will add a nice beard as well. Fire your feedbacks at will! Cheers.
I caught Temple of Doom again last night, been a long time, and chuckled when the good guy army came out at the end with Blue Turbans & capes to kill the red-cloaked wearing bad guys.
thanks. I thought about Turbine for a bit... Did you know I was art director on one of the many middle earth online games before it sifted to Turbine? Spent a lot of time working with Derek who used to be the designer. aaaaanyway... My missus has England set in her heart. Still, open to big offers
just throw some idea, myb you can add some cloth/veil/turban with team color and also be carefull i just find out mason man at arms class have DLC helmet similar like that
This leading Southern California Games studio was founded in early 1997 by a group of veteran game developers who had individually coded, designed, and produced a vast and diverse range of highly acclaimed titles for a variety of different platforms. Since then this studio has produced titles for the Playstation 2 and Xbox…
[ QUOTE ] ... flying islands with big turbines on the bottoms.. more of a tech-based society setup than this mystical one. [/ QUOTE ] hahah, same here. That's where my difference was from this one. I wanted to supply a reason how the chunks of earth were up staying up there, so I was going to have giant engines/turbines…
yay! lol. :) yea, thats what I was aimin for. I'm thinking a turban, like the ones she used to wear, would be a good chance for a cloth study, so I think that will be the goal for tomorrow along with any crits brought up here.
You're correct about the air through the scoop/tube (sort of), but the problem is the generator inside. It's the laws of physics I'm referring to here. You're converting one form of energy into another. The generator would need a turbine on it to cause it to spin. That turbine would resist the wind and thus slow down the…
Hawken: Yeah, actually. The jet fuel burns at 1700 degrees celsius in the turbine, but it's cooled before it comes into contact with the metal. "The cans are carefully shaped to maintain a layer of fresh unburned air between the metal surfaces and the central core. This unburned air mixes into the burned gases to bring the…