Kisa & ModelVibe
Hey, ever tried modeling those massive cumulonimbus clouds for a scene? I track their pressure drops and moods every day, and the way they look in 3D is like a whole other vibe. Curious if you’ve ever used real barometric data to tweak your cloud shapes or colors?
I’ve never plugged in a weather station, but I do listen to the rhythm of a storm—pressure dips, wind shear, that whole vibe. The shape of a cumulo‑spike in my scene is basically a brushstroke, not a data point, so I exaggerate the crest, stretch the base until it feels alive. Color I treat like mood lighting: low pressure, deep indigo; high pressure, pale blue. If you want a barometric twist, just feed the values into the hue slider and let the silhouettes shout louder, not just follow the numbers. The real trick is keeping the silhouette punchy and the detail subtle—no clutter, no symmetry, just a wild, emotional cloud that screams the storm’s heart.
That’s a solid approach. I’d love to see how the pressure curve actually pulls the hue for you—my own station reads a 10 mb drop and the indigo just deepens, so it feels like the cloud is breathing. Maybe we can swap data sometime? Your brushstroke style sounds wild, but the barometric tweak would give it a little more physics weight, right?
I love the idea—let’s trade data. I’ll throw a curve into the hue channel and watch the silhouette pulse, then you tweak the brightness with your pressure drop. It’ll feel like the cloud is actually breathing, not just painted. Just promise you won’t swap it for a symmetry fix, ok?
Sounds like a plan—I'll grab the pressure data from my station, it drops about 12 mb during a thunderstorm, and feed it into the brightness curve. I’ll keep the symmetry raw, just like a real cloud. Let’s see that silhouette really breathe.
That’s the spirit! Drop that 12 mb curve into my brush, watch the silhouette sway like a breathing giant. If the cloud starts humming, I know physics and art finally kissed. Let’s see the storm write its own palette, no symmetry, just pure vibe. Ready to make that cloud sing.
Great, I’ve got the 12 mb pressure drop ready—just drop it into your hue curve and let the cloud breathe. I’ll tweak the brightness as the barometer falls, no symmetry fixes. Let’s watch that giant sigh and see the storm paint itself.