===== From sshaw@fas.harvard.edu: I like the idea. I did recognize the Escher inspiration in the image, which you referred to in the text file. My only complaint about the image is that the footprint is very obscured. I wouldn't have recognized it as a footprint if not for the description. It was a good idea to include the can for scale. ===== From brendthess@aol.com: Hahahaaaa. Bigfoot, huh? You talking about the truck tire, or the footprint? ===== From nijman@nmtrix.com: Good idea, only not clear enough to see the footprint(s). Technical very well done. ===== From gregj56590@aol.com: Scene is too dark: are you using proper assumed gamma? Otherwise, excellent image. Draws viewer in both thematically and artistically. ===== From mar@physics.usyd.edu.au: Nice grass. I recognised this as an Escher-inspired image right away... looks like you could do a good recreation. ===== From johnson@pharmacy.arizona.edu: I love it! That is one of my favorite Escher works. The footprint needs to be a bit less subtle, though, IMHO. It took me a while to find it. But the beer can is genius, and the puddle was worth all the effort and polygons that went into it! ===== From gmccarter@hotmail.com: Great concept and technique. But I had to search very hard to find a footprint. The "Bigfoot Ale" label is an unfortunate choice: it turns a suberbly realistic image more cartoonish. ===== From jull43@ij.net: Perhaps I am blind but I don't see what you are describling. And given the tire track the rest of the scene is incoherent. ===== From sdevet@istar.ca: It took me 5 viewings to find the print. The can looks great, but the water/land boundary seems too angular and chaotic. This would have looked really cool with the Superpatch's Angle Dependant Reflection, as water is almost fully transparant when viewed head on, but very reflected when viewed at a shallow angle... Hrm.. dirt and water in upper right looks like dinosaur in profile. ===== From file: A little dark. I can see how this could be a great image.