- 4,778
- Færder
- syntex123
- Syntex260Z
It's all in the details. These Falken Tire liveries may look the same, but if you look close you can spot many differences! This is the essence you have to catch in this round. Photo and livery made by @BLiTZ - (click for full-size)
This Fortnight's Theme
In case you forgot, the winner of round one of The Livery Editor Competition was @BLiTZ, and he has cooked up something really exciting for this third round. Without further ado, let's hear what he has to say:
From Impul's iconic Calsonic blue that's graced Nissans since the early 80's, to Martini's signature stripes dominating the world stage both on gravel and tarmac, there are certain liveries that stand the test of time.
Whilst on the surface the designs may look the same each year, when you look closely at the little details you see that they subtly evolve over time. Sponsors come and go and branding evolves so with that in mind, this round's theme is 'Then & Now'.
Your challenge is to create two distinct liveries demonstrating the evolution of a team's colours using one 'old' car and a second newer model.
Whilst its very easy to plaster the same decals on two different cars, the devil is in the detail with this one and the key is to try and make both liveries look period-correct. So take you time when choosing decals and select versions that are suitable for the age of the car.
CARS: Any; one 'old' and one 'new'
LIVERIES: Two distinct liveries demonstrating the evolution of an iconic design
USER MADE DECALS: Yes
LOCATIONS: Shiretoko (for your main images. This has to comply with the rules. See below)
SCAPES: Yes
1) Choose the Shiretoko scape (found by searching all locations and refining by 'Japan'and 'Snow'):
2) Apply the following settings:
Camera
Camera Settings
Aperture: F 2.8
Shutter Speed: 1/60 (as it's not a panning shot I don't know that this is important)
Focus: Single AF
Environment Settings
Aspect: 16:9
Orientation: Landscape
Resolution: High
Effects
White Balance
Temperature: 9800 K
Colour Cast Correction: -0.060
Exposure correction: EV +2.0
Special Effects
Chromatic Aberration: 5
Screen Effect 1
Mask: Background
Filter: None
Individual Colour Tone Correction:
Saturation: 0
Brightness: 50
Contrast: 250
Highlight: 100
Midpoint Correction: 100
Blackpoint Correction: -5
Car Effects
Filter: None
Individual Colour Tone Correction:
Saturation: 150
Brightness: 75
Contrast: 120
Highlight: 500
Midpoint Correction: 500
Blackpoint Correction: 0
3) Place your car in the middle of the scape at a suitable angle:
4) Zoom in to 102mm (certain cars may require more or less to fit in the viewfinder) and move the camera until you're happy that the car is centred in the shot:
5) Move the focus to the nearest corner of the car (I normally centre on the headlamp closest to the centre of the image) and take your shot.
6) For a shot of the rear, go back to the Car tab and hit R2, switch to Camera and refocus (again I use the tail lamp nearest the centre) and take the shot. If the car has moved off-centre then move the viewfinder and adjust the zoom as you see fit.
For new cars/liveries simply find the scape in your library and reopen and change the car, then rinse and repeat as above.
Images, GIFs, entry format and tutorial made by @BLiTZ
2) Apply the following settings:
Camera
Camera Settings
Aperture: F 2.8
Shutter Speed: 1/60 (as it's not a panning shot I don't know that this is important)
Focus: Single AF
Environment Settings
Aspect: 16:9
Orientation: Landscape
Resolution: High
Effects
White Balance
Temperature: 9800 K
Colour Cast Correction: -0.060
Exposure correction: EV +2.0
Special Effects
Chromatic Aberration: 5
Screen Effect 1
Mask: Background
Filter: None
Individual Colour Tone Correction:
Saturation: 0
Brightness: 50
Contrast: 250
Highlight: 100
Midpoint Correction: 100
Blackpoint Correction: -5
Car Effects
Filter: None
Individual Colour Tone Correction:
Saturation: 150
Brightness: 75
Contrast: 120
Highlight: 500
Midpoint Correction: 500
Blackpoint Correction: 0
3) Place your car in the middle of the scape at a suitable angle:
4) Zoom in to 102mm (certain cars may require more or less to fit in the viewfinder) and move the camera until you're happy that the car is centred in the shot:
5) Move the focus to the nearest corner of the car (I normally centre on the headlamp closest to the centre of the image) and take your shot.
6) For a shot of the rear, go back to the Car tab and hit R2, switch to Camera and refocus (again I use the tail lamp nearest the centre) and take the shot. If the car has moved off-centre then move the viewfinder and adjust the zoom as you see fit.
For new cars/liveries simply find the scape in your library and reopen and change the car, then rinse and repeat as above.
Images, GIFs, entry format and tutorial made by @BLiTZ
UNIQUE RESTRICTIONS:
1. Must use one 'Old' and one 'New' model. The cars don't need to be from the same manufacturer or even the same class of racing so long as they aren't from the same year.
2. The liveries can be fantasy or real or a mixture of both (e.g. a replica of an old car and how it may look today if the team still existed or how a new team could have looked if they were racing in an earlier time).
Competition Rules
Please, ensure you read and understand all requirements for this competition. Failure to follow the rules may result in disqualification. If you have questions, start a convo with me.
- The only way you can take part is to be a member of the GTPlanet forums. If you haven't created your account yet, click here.
- It is recommended you host your image either here on GTPlanet (via the Media section), or on Flickr.
- Not sure how to submit your image? Here's a guide for both methods mentioned above.
- Preview images must not exceed 640 pixels in either direction.
- A preview image must be representative of the full-size image. Do not add effects to it.
- Please use a clickable-preview to full-size, not a separate text link for it;
it makes poll creation much easier! - Mark your FINAL ENTRY clearly, with red text.
- Unsure how to? Copy and paste the following:
Code:
[COLOR=red][B]FINAL ENTRY[/B][/COLOR]
- You are required to use two ‘main’ photos, viewing the front and the back of the car, and if neccessary only one additional photo taken the way you want inside a spoiler.
- No heavy post-game editing, slight enhancing is allowed.
- One entry per user. It must be your own work, and never previously used in a comp.
- Do not ask other users to choose your entry.
- Absolutely no entries which utilize edited/hacked file saves.
- You may change your entry once. Do it clearly; edit out your previous entry, and
either post the new one in a new reply, or in place of the original. - Do not post "Honourable Mentions" or outtakes - just your Final Entry, that's all.
- Winner gets to choose the following Fortnight's theme.
- Winners cannot enter in their own theme!
- The Host may ask for the original image/livery and it must be submitted if so.
- It's recommended to share the original livery online(in-game) to prove it’s your work.
- Unique to this competition, you can also make a 360° GIF! It is not a requirement, but it is recommended.
Go to giphy.com
and upload your clip (In GT Sport go to My Library > Car Livery > Press your livery and then hit Preview. Record a full 360° spin and then speed up the recording to 15 seconds in a video editing program on your PC/Phone/Tablet. See example in spoiler at the bottom of the post how it should look.
First of all, download and install Blender. I used 2.78 for this tutorial but the current one at this time, 2.79a, shouldn't be any different.
Open Blender up and you should see a screen like this (minus all the recent files because you haven't used it yet)
Currently, it's in its Default mode, for 3D modelling. We'll need to change it to the Video Editing mode.
If you go up to the top where it says 'Default', click on the button outlined in red to choose the Screen layout...
... and click on Video Editing...
... and you should now be greeted with something like this.
First things first, go down to the bottom, where it says Add. Click on that and click on Movie.
Locate and select your recorded clip on your USB or wherever you've placed it. Click Add Movie Strip...
... and you should now see, along the lower section of the screen called the Video Sequence Editor, two bars. The darkish blue coloured one is the video, the teal coloured on is the audio. Don't worry about the audio, we don't need to mess with it.
Press the Home button while your mouse cursor is in the Video Sequence Editor to see the whole sequence.
Next you'll need to change both of the values, outlined in red, to 450. The left value is the end limit of the number of frames your final video will have, and the right value is the cursor point (the green thing that says 15+00)
The reason why is because the 450th frame on this current project, running at roughly 30fps, would equate to 15 seconds.
Now to speed our clip up to fit those 15 seconds. Go into Add, the Effect Strip, then select Speed Control.
Right-click on the pink Speed strip, then go over to the sidebar on the right. Scroll down until you see the tab named Effect Strip and Untick 'Stretch to input strip length'.
Now for a bit of Maths, you'll see in the image below that my Speed factor is 1.200...
This is worked out by dividing the total number of frames of your clip, found on the end of your bar label (540 in my case)...
by the total number of frames we need (450). 540 / 450 = 1.2 so I put 1.2.
Now the clip has been sped up, press Play on the bottom to check to see if your clip runs and loops properly in the top right. You might see a fps counter pop up and slow down as you play but don't worry about that.
Now to export the new clip, go to the top left screen part, click on the square box with an image inside and select Properties...
... which will change that screen part to this.
We need to set up the export options and encoding before we export. Scroll down until you see the Output tab and select MPEG, then the Encoding tab will pop up. Open the Encoding tab and make sure you have the Format as MPEG-4, the Codec as H.264 and the Audio as AAC.
Right, scroll back up to the top and hit the Animation button, under Render...
... and you should now see Blender playing through your video and rendering it.
Once it is done, open File Explorer, go into your C:\ drive and open up the 'tmp' folder, there you should see your new video. It'll probably be named '001-450.mp4' or something.
Drag that video into GIPHY, set the duration to 15 seconds and click through the rest and there you go.Deadline
April 25, 2018
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