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How Open Film Project "Cosmos Laundromat" Made Blender Better

An anonymous reader writes: At the beginning of August the Blender Institute released Cosmos Laundromat: First Cycle, its seventh open project. More than just a 10-minute short film, Cosmos Laundromat is the Blender Institute's most ambitious project, a pilot for the first fully free and open animated feature film. In his article on Opensource.com animator and open source advocate Jason van Gumster highlights the film project and takes a look at some of its most significant contributions to the Blender open source project.

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  1. how this changed blender by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 3, Informative

    * Improved hair/fur simulation and rendering
    * Enhanced 3D view (with cool effcts like screen-space ambient occlusion and depth of field)
    * Painting features and performance increases (including cavity masks)
    * Updated/improved dependency graph
    * Forceviz forcefield visualization
    * Filebrowser preview of image sequences (including playback)
    * Sticky keys
    * Progress integrating open source libraries such as OpenVBD (volumetric data), Alembic (mesh caching), and Ptex (high-detail textures)
    * Two external-to-Blender tools for rendering and pipeline management, Flamenco and ATTRACT
    * Lots of bug fixes
    * And of course, a wide array of small, but time-saving enhancements all across Blender (particularly in tools for animating, sculpting, and sequencing shots). These are the kinds of important improvements that can only be made by being in the same room as artists while they work.

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  2. Re:Oh finally, a new sample video by aNonnyMouseCowered · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Blender Institute has made two other short movies since Bx3. The full chronology of the "major" (being a relative term) Blender open movie projects:

    1) Elephants Dream (2006)
    2) Big Buck Bunny (2008)
    3) Sintel (2010)
    4) Tears of Steel (2012)

    Tears of Steel is "live action" but has enough frame by frame CGI effects to qualify as animation. The current project is part of its first full-length feature ("full-length" being again a relative term as the movie is projected to last less than an hour).