Folk art-style decorative doodle done with virtual oriental brush , composited and with color fills and variations of color fills done in photoshop. I thought that saved in the file all the snapshots I made in the history of so many different L*a*b hue/saturation/lightness adjustment variation layers toggled off and on. Nope. So those master settings are gone, but :shrug: I have the rasters at high resolution. Also here: a crossfade of many colors between variations.

See http://s.earthbound.io/4h for original, print and usage. ~ Software used: 3DS Max (to render Work 00059 perpendicular to the normal of 3D noise terrain), Dynamic Auto-Painter Klimt3 preset, Photoshop, FilterForge. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib

See http://s.earthbound.io/4i for original, print and usage. ~ Software used: 3DS Max (to render Work 00059 perpendicular to the normal of 3D noise terrain), Dynamic Auto-Painter Klimt3 preset, Photoshop, FilterForge. This variant was hue-shifted and further worked up from the base work. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib

See http://s.earthbound.io/4j for original, print and usage. ~ Software used: 3DS Max (to render Work 00059 perpendicular to the normal of 3D noise terrain), Dynamic Auto-Painter Klimt3 preset, Photoshop, FilterForge. This variant is a black and white workup of the base work. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib

Created by mapping art to the Z axis of a 3D noise map (terrain heightmap), viewed top down, then working up the result in Dynamic AutoPainter Klimt preset, then hue shifting in Lab colorspace in photoshop, and maybe other tricks (my notes say FilterForge?). Former title: 00061 abstraction, and maybe other things. I gave up on numbering works–keeping it straight in my many source files is a technical feat beyond me.

Here is a digital art work I created with 3DSmax, Corel Painter and Photoshop.

See http://s.earthbound.io/2j for original, print and usage. ~ I used #3DSMax and #SoulburnScripts to randomly scatter and rotate brush-stroke textured tiles, then worked up the resulting render further in #CorelPainter and #Photoshop. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib
Abstraction (Work 00014)

With and , I randomly scattered and rotated very many brush-stroke textured tiles (I used 3DSMax as a particle painter). I then worked up the resulting render further in  and . ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib

Here are two variant works with color hue-shifted in Lab color mode (it produces more human-perceptual-friendly color changes than the brute math of RGB).

See http://s.earthbound.io/2i for original, print and usage. ~ I used #3DSMax and #SoulburnScripts to randomly scatter and rotate brush-stroke textured tiles, then worked up the resulting render further in #CorelPainter and #Photoshop. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib
Abstraction (Work 00014 color variant 3 slightly desaturated magenta)
See http://s.earthbound.io/2h for original, print and usage. ~ I used #3DSMax and #SoulburnScripts to randomly scatter and rotate brush-stroke textured tiles, then worked up the resulting render further in #CorelPainter and #Photoshop. ~ A hoity-toity robot talks about this at http://s.earthbound.io/artgib
Abstraction (Work 00014 color variant 2 faded lavendar)

Click the images to open larger ones, free for personal use. This was formerly entitled Abstraction 00021.

EDIT: there used to be a cover of a super disturbed fiction eBook I wrote here; there isn't anymore. But of it, I wrote:

*I'm not even really sure why I'd put this on my blog. In keeping with "I'm paying attention to you, whatever you give me, Image Brain?" Did you know if you do that with any part of your brain–just sketch or sing into a voice recorder or write or whatever anything your brain gives you–did you know that if you do this, then your unconscious realizes you are paying attention, and it gives you more music or images or whatever to create? This is my experience. Caveat: this does not mean you should publish anything and everything your brain gives you ;) but if you do this, you may find yourself creating things you wish to publish.