Bryce 5 is a graphics software package that can be used to generate terrain landscapes and other three dimensional scenes. It includes a graphical user interface where the shape elements can be positioned; a palette of various shapes; tools for applying patterns to the shapes, and controls for manipulating the environmental effects. The last allows control over the cloud cover, the position of the sun and the moon, and various atmospheric haze and fog effects. A graphics program is a piece of computer software that enables a user to modify or view graphics files. ... The rewrite of this article is being devised at Talk:3D computer graphics/Temp. ... A graphical user interface (or GUI, pronounced gooey) is a method of interacting with a computer through a metaphor of direct manipulation of graphical images and widgets in addition to text. ... An artists palette A palette is: A thin board that a painter holds and mixes colour pigments on. ... Haze is an atmospheric phenomenon where dust, smoke and other pollutant particles obscure the normal clarity of the sky. ... Early morning fog obscures the surface of this lake in Carrollton, Georgia, but the sky remains clear. ...
Objects can be grouped and boolean rules applied to produce more complex shapes. There are also random terrain generators that can apply various erosion effects. Mesh models and masks can also be imported for more complex effects. Rudimentary animation capabilities allow camera movement and other motion effects to be produced. Animation refers to the technique in which each frame of a film or movie is produced individually, whether generated as a computer graphic, or by photographing a drawn image, or by repeatedly making small changes to a model (see claymation and stop motion), and then photographing the result. ...
Although not as powerful as most of the other rendering programs, it can still produce stunning results in capable hands.
The Bryce project window (the hairline rectangle within which the scene is constructed and rendered) is preconfigured to 540 x 405 pixels.
Bryce opens with default sky and fog settings turned on, which, although great for making artistic landscapes, need to be disabled for cartographic work (at least initially).
In Bryce, as with all 3D landscape software, the image and the DEM upon which it will be draped must register to one another perfectly.