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Super Yacht - Starfish

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  • Super Yacht - Starfish

    Starfish, 50 meter luxury Superyacht.

    Starfish was a huge project as the client wanted everything, high res stills for print of the exterior and interior, animations the works. Fortunately the naval architects blueprints, schematics and reference where superb, reducing the stress levels ever so slightly. Working remotely with another 3d Artist and good buddy, we where able to synchronise workflows to get her complete. Plenty more stills available at my Website.

    Tragically though on August 16th 2012, Starfish was partially destroyed in a major fire at the warehouse she was being constructed. The news was hard to hear after working on the project for so long I’d gained tremendous respect for the project, design and vision.

    Stills:







    Animation: Which is now outdated due to a major redesign. Most notable is the stone decking which has now changed to teak as shown in the stills above.
    James Hall
    Technical Director
    New Zealand
    www.jhall.nz

  • #2
    Yowza!! It must have been a massive amount of work!
    Bobby Parker
    www.bobby-parker.com
    e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
    phone: 2188206812

    My current hardware setup:
    • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
    • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
    • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 X2
    • ​Windows 11 Pro

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    • #3
      What?! No helicopter pad?? Only paupers have yachts without helo-pads. And I bet there isn't even a single bottle of 1787 Chateau Lafite on board.

      Just kidding. Great job, James.
      - Geoff

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      • #4
        Nice, was the glow done in post or the V-Ray flare effects?
        Maya 2020/2022
        Win 10x64
        Vray 5

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        • #5
          Thanks for the positive comments guys.

          Yoyoboy: Sorry no helipad, major design flaw :P

          Snivlem: The underwater lights where done with standard Max .ies lights and Vray Fog under a displaced water plane. Took some time and tweaking to get good results from all angles, but worth it. The deck lighting flares where all done in post, After Effects.
          James Hall
          Technical Director
          New Zealand
          www.jhall.nz

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          • #6
            Nice work there James.
            I saw the fire on the news.... are they rebuilding the boat?
            Chris Jackson
            Shiftmedia
            www.shiftmedia.sydney

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            • #7
              Nice work. Can you speak at all about how you did the water? I am playing with a few techniques at the moment for oceans so wouldn't mind picking your brain a bit.
              Toucan Creative
              Linkedin Profile

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              • #8
                It takes guts to take on a project like this
                It turned out pretty great! I would only like to see the yacht glow more on the mid-day renders. I'm guessing it's white, and not light gray...you know how yachts sparkle in sun
                www.hrvojedesign.com

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                • #9
                  jacksc02: As far as I'm aware they are currently regrouping to figure out the projects future. Official statements available on the official website, Aquos Yachts.

                  tooves: I can't give out to much information about the ocean sorry. All I can say is I've tried every plugin, work around, trick in the book and none even come close to providing a working solution. I needed a solution that you could get up close, far away, see to the horizon, animate, change camera angles on a whim, different lighting, the works. So the solution I came to that's used in the images is extremely brute force with no plugins. The surface is a simple plane using a VRay Material and VRay Displacement on top.

                  Crayox13: The white material your referring to is supposed to be a very light shade of grey, but in some angles its overblown and appears white. Getting a consistent shade across all images with different lighting and sun positions was damn near impossible. Personally I like glowing the bright surfaces but clients come first and they didn't agree, so toned it down a lot.
                  James Hall
                  Technical Director
                  New Zealand
                  www.jhall.nz

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