Tokyo dark city skyline at night, Panorama view background privacy screen, seamless / alpha fading out
Do you want a realistic looking background for your house or skybox ? You don´t like the usual photo-backgrounds that look fake and unnatural ?
These textures are made of highly detailed real life pictures. They are hi-res, horizontal seamless (for tiling) and fading out for a smooth transition with the surrounding area.
There are different scenes available - look my other items for more please !
In this box you will get 2 textures - both 1024*1024:
A horizontal seamless texture for use inside or outside (see picture 3). And the same with alpha transparent fade out at the top. This looks really nice outside because it is dissolving into the sky and not leaving ugly edges (see pictures 1 and 2, texture is used on a box and on a cylinder to show how it looks).
Because every texture is unique and seamless adapted by hand to get best landscape result they are copy but no mod and no transfer. You can use them by "drag and drop" at all and at many of your objects as you like. Notecard included.
- Panorama view background texture
- horizontal seamless, alpha part transparent
- natural fading out at top to SL sky
- different versions included
- made of highly detailed real life pictures
good
i'm surprinsingly satisfied with this 2011 product.
requires the right adjusments but at the end, looks quite good
don't mess this up!
I'm glad I bought this, because it's a lot higher-res than the more-elaborate privacy screen I'd previously purchased. This gives me that "fade into the sky" I'd really wanted, too, plus a lot less graininess and "artifacting" than my last purchase.
Warning!! I didn't read the included instructions and wasn't paying attention, and I dragged the texture onto the ground I'd worked very hard on (thinking it was an object I could render). Whoops! It took me a hot minute to realize that this IS a texture, and that dragging it onto a prim will change that prim's face. Oh no! So please do not attempt to unpack or render the texture you receive.
I realized my error very quickly, restored my prim's original textures, created a new prim, made it transparent on all sides except for the side that utilized this particular texture, and THEN read the included instructions. Which were very informative. Oh, well.
So remember to render a prim first before assigning this lovely image to it. It's great, by the way! I think this is probably the best cyberpunk background currently on Second Life.