Sansar Creator Interview: Agustine

Agustine's Horse Carousel in Ryan's Garden 2 Sansar 26 July 2017

Tucked away in a corner of the Ryan’s Garden experience in Sansar is my favourite Sansar creation to date: a rotating musical horse carousel.  You have to wander a little bit into the forest to find it (hint: listen for the sound of the calliope).  The creator, a Sansar user by the name of Agustine, has been a literal one-man object-making army since he was invited into the Sansar closed beta in December 2016 (the same time I started). He has no less than 250 items he created in the Sansar Store already, anything and everything from a medieval style guillotine to a shiny red disco dance floor!   (Here’s a listing sorted by price, with the many freebies he offers listed first.  Grab a kickable football or beach ball!)

One of the many regular features I plan for the Sansar Newsblog is a creator interview series, where I ask questions of the many creators who have already been attracted to Linden Lab’s new virtual world.  And the first interview in this series is with my friend Agustine.  (A second interview with Maxwell Graf will be published tomorrow sometime.)

Can you tell me a little bit about yourself and your background, and how did you get started making and selling objects for virtual worlds?

Howdy Ryan, I’m currently 47 years of age and can tell you that my first dabbling of art started at age 7, doing simple 2-dimensional real life still art. It was not until college years when I really found a big interest in computers and 3D graphics, but I was majoring humanities so I switched to a major in Microcomputer Graphics Applications. At that same time, I got into game modding with UnrealEngine and I created a basic western-themed game named “LawDogs Mod”. I am impressed today that people still download that old game, and I feel perhaps maybe should make a sequel.

It was not until about 2005 when a German artist friend of mine told me about Second Life. He kept insisting that I try it, but I thought it was kinda absurd living a fantasy life online. After several tries, my friend finally won and he got me hooked into virtual worlds. Now that Sansar is here, I continue that same path of 3D content creation for the community and I can’t believe how far I’ve come along doing this.

I understand that you are building a Western themed experience in Sansar. Can you tell me more about that project, and what challenges have you faced making it?

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Though I have a few experiences in the plans, my main one is a western themed experience that I am slowly developing on my own. At this early beta stage of Sansar it’s been very difficult to fully take advantage of common features to give the experience the life it needs, things such as smoothly animated props, animated water, and interactive props are few of those challenges, but considering the progress the team at Sansar has made, the future is looking bright for this project. (Ryan’s note: Agustine’s Western experience is not yet published in the Sansar Atlas, and therefore not yet accessible to the public.  The pictures you see here were given to me by Agustine.)

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Where do you draw your inspiration for making virtual objects? For example, what was your inspiration and what was the process you followed in creating your wonderful horse carousel?

Old western history and art and spaghetti western movie classics have been the primary motivation and inspiration which drive to most of the 3D artwork I do, but I also have a great interest in gothic and Victorian art for its elegant beauty.

My horse carousel project all started about February when a few people were requesting one. At first, I really didn’t find the motivation to make one until I got a few more requests. By then, I took the liberty to research classic old time horse carousels and started sketching, jotting, and brainstorming how I wanted mine. However, there was one challenge that I could not solve and that was the horse itself. Organic modelling such as humans and animals is not my speciality, so it took some time till I finally found a candidate to fill that void. It still needs a very smooth keyframe animation, but I know that feature soon will be added to Sansar. Also, sometime down the road avatars in Sansar will be able to ride on that carousel, which will make the experience extremely dynamic.

(Ryan’s note: I cannot wait for better keyframe animations to come!  My carousel definitely has a little hiccup in its current rotation script LOL!)

What advice would you give to beginning content creators in Sansar?

To those of you finding great interest in 3D art creation, do your homework and take your time and do basic, easy steps in learning 3D/2D graphics. If you’re on a budget and cannot afford premium software, try taking advantage of the very well-received community-made graphics design software out there. (Ryan’s note: for example, Blender and Gimp.) Don’t be afraid to ask the more experienced users on the Sansar forum for tips, assistance and help. That’s why we are here.. until then friends, Happy Atlas surfing!

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