3D Artwork (Blender): Diamond-studded Owl Brooch

Prepare to Be Bedazzled!

I've finally finished the third and last part of my diamond modeling and rendering project, culminating in the creation of the artwork that started the idea for the series. This was supposed to have been done by July of last year, but a series of test renders of the CG diamonds created for this artwork busted my PC's ageing power supply and also took out my video card in the process. R.I.P., GTX 1060.

Once I got this machine back up and running again I decided to take it easy for a while and not do any more heavy rendering on it until I was absolutely sure that it wouldn't die on me again. And as you know, in my life, my job as a senior 3D artist always gets me busy with work. So this project got put on the back burner again, only for God to know when it would be resumed.

The brooch in its original colors

Then last week I started tinkering with LuxCoreRender again and did some diamond test renders with it. I was using a newer version of it than the one I had before my computer died. This newer version had improved immensely in speed and quality so I thought why not resume this project now and just get the modeling done and out of the way. Then render it at night after work. So on Saturday afternoon last week I started modeling it and finished it in just a few hours after starting it.

Modeling it was easy as it's just made of a few simple 3D volumes shaped into the pieces that make up the parts of the object. Then a newer version of LuxCoreRender was released last Tuesday and I immediately downloaded and tested it right away on my project. After seeing that it had improved even more, I said to myself that it's time to finish this thing and make someone happy. This artwork's recipient is a lady who loves to draw owls.

And looking at the finished work right now and being amazed at how something made of just some simple 3D volumes can look so pretty, makes me wonder how she is going to react to it.

In case you want to read the previous blogs about this project, check them out here, and here.



The Reference Object

Here is the real brooch that this CG version is based on. You can see that I've modified the design a bit and added more details to the flat and featureless design of the original's wings, tail, and head. And you can see why I had some apprehensions in resuming this project.

The real thing has 24 rhinestones that I replaced with diamonds on the CG version. Knowing that a particularly heavy test render of these same diamonds took out my computer last year, I was afraid that the same fate could happen again to this revived machine.

But love has a powerful way of making you face your fears, and just make that leap of faith. I mumbled a silent plea to the heavens for help 'cause you all know how hard it is to buy a new videocard these days. My prayers were answered and now feast your eyes on the outcome.

And although I consider this done, I have a feeling I'll be making more of these over time.



Wireframes and Details



As I've mentioned above, the model is just made of simple volumes, namely cubes, spheres, and cylinders. I wasn't able to record the modeling process because this model began life as just a practice session. But I liked how it turned out and didn't want to repeat the process again. So I decided to just continue working on it until it was done. And yes, that is a Christian cross on its back.

The recipient of this artwork is a devout Catholic and that cross holding all the pieces together as a supporting structure is symbolic of our struggles in life, and our faith that keeps us from falling apart spiritually, especially in the hardships that we face in these dark times. I also put that cross there to remind and assure her that we are on the same page, with regard to matters of faith.



Color Variations



After doing a test render of the brooch in its original colors, I thought why not make color variations to see how they would look. I was blown away by the beauty of the renders that I made more than a dozen of them with different color combinations. And seeing those pictures now laid out here in this blog makes me feel like I'm looking at a jewelry brochure. The blue one is my favorite.



Closeups and Other Views

More eyecandy for your eyes and it's hard to believe sometimes that they are not real. Props to LuxCoreRender's developers for doing a good job on turning this once-slow but high-quality opensource renderer's performance into something that is bearable to use for this kind of visualization.

I must say that this is the prettiest artwork I've ever done so far as a 3DCG artist. We do jewelry viz projects at work sometimes, but I never got tasked to do them as I was always busy doing other stuff. Some of my friends say there is money in this kind of photo-real jewelry visualization work, but no thanks. This is just a hobby. I'm an animator and will always prefer to work in that capacity.



And that's it for now. My next blogs will be the continuation of the basic aircraft modeling tutorial I made for some friends, as well as my first forays into Blender character rigging and animation. Stay tuned for them.

Thank you for reading and I hoped you liked what I shared, and even learned something from it. Stay safe, have a nice day, and God Bless!

Hoot hoot!


This blog was created with Ecency Desktop, Blender, LuxCoreRender, ShareX, and GIMP.

Sort:  

Wow this really looks great thanks a lot for sharing

!ENGAGE 10

!giphy great work

Thank you! I'm glad you liked it. 🙂

!ENGAGE 10

!giphy welcome

Thank you for your engagement on this post, you have recieved ENGAGE tokens.

I've seen a lot of really nice designs here over the years. This is one that stands out. 👍🏿

Thank you! And I am just as amazed with what the renderer can do, considering that the model itself is just simple, by any competent 3D artist's standards.

The modelling looks cool. The final illustration somehow reflects a true brass. !discovery 30

Hi there. Thank you for your appreciation. And yes, you are correct. I've just checked the file and I saw that the brass preset was used, instead of gold.


This post was shared and voted inside the discord by the curators team of discovery-it
Join our community! hive-193212
Discovery-it is also a Witness, vote for us here
Delegate to us for passive income. Check our 80% fee-back Program

Thank you for your engagement on this post, you have recieved ENGAGE tokens.

This looks very realistic, really. Congrats!

I'm glad you liked it. Cheers!

Didn't immediately register the first image as 3d in the thumbnail, initially thought "oh how nice someone gave you an awesome looking brooch" and then read the title XD

The colour variants look really cool too! Glad it didn't take out your rig this time x_x I sympathise a lot, I'm currently crossing fingers every time I do renders involving particie hair. Most of the time it's fine, sometimes it crashes XD

not saying much, sometimes I could just be scrolling hive or something and it will crash, I should probably go get it checked out soon but like everyone else money is an issue

The colour variations are really pretty too :)

I couldn't believe my eyes too, after seeing my first test render. LuxCore's shaders, even in their default settings, can really make ordinary stuff look awesome.

And these are just amateur-level renderings. The stuff I see in a certain YT channel of a real jeweler-turned-3D artist makes mine look like crap.

Oh, and your card's glitches are probably just a driver issue, or maybe something that a Windows update can fix.

I haven't done the shiny gemstones yet (just gold and some non-transluscent quartz type rocks), I imagine they'd be pretty hard to get looking right.

I use Linux, several updates hasn't fixed the issue (but probably are at least somewhat affecting it as it's better or worse after some updates XD), may also be hardware related. One day I'll have enough money to take it back to the shop for upgrades.

I love Linux, especially how its graphics subsystem has such low overhead that rendering is faster in it, and basically any graphical operation too.

Back in 2007 I installed a DVD of opensuse and instantly fell in love with it, that I uninstalled Windows XP. I used it until 2010 and reverted to Windows because of some software needs.

And last year I was using Puppy Linux alongside Windows 10 if I needed to do some heavy modeling and not need my graphics tablet, since it does not work in Linux. So I switch back and forth with it and Windows just to be able to sculpt and run other stuff.

Not a Wacom tablet? That's what I've got, everything works fine. Well aside from the gui utility thingi, I don't know what it's like now but at the time I looked at it several years ago it left a LOT to be desired so I ended up having to write a bunch of scripts for my apps to set the pen and tablet buttons and triggered by gestures drawn with the tablet XD Haven't tried looking at the gui since though as the scripts are still doing their job to this day.

uffff super cool la verdad me dejo impresionado , la calidad de color y todo , de verdad que es lindo

Coool work friend! Take a little gift!

PIZZA!

PIZZA Holders sent $PIZZA tips in this post's comments:
(1/5) @nftjournalist tipped @kryptik.tigrrr3d (x1)

You can now send $PIZZA tips in Discord via tip.cc!