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From helene.dumur@free.fr:
Good work, but the wall seems to be unfinished

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From marlo.steed@uleth.ca:
Nicely done.  More attention to a realistic background and lighting and bit of
dof could have turned this into a stunning entry.
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From tigerhawk@stic.net:
I remember those! Those things were awesome! Nice scene, but I took some points
off because of the lightning, floor and wall textures. 
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From irtc@maartendinger.net:
Nice picture overall. The bricks, however, need work - the PovRay bricks
function makes IMO incredibly unconvincing looking bricks. Check out
http://www.shipbrook.com/jeff/raytrace/bricks.html for a tutorial for making
more realistic looking bricks with PovRay without resorting to isosurfaces.

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From rgow@lanset.com:
Good concept & good modelling.  Walls not up to the level of the toys though.

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From jacoons@ameritech.net:
Extra points for realism, but i deducted points for the lack of detail on the
walls, window and sky. Also (just my opinion), having lights *in* the room 
would have allowed the toy surfaces to reflect light, which would have added 
realism. Still, you received one of my highest scores. 

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From enrique.sahagun@uam.es:
I know meccano and it has remembered me lots of good times when I was a kid. I
have played a lot with it. Seems that you have worked a lot in the meccano
pieces but the background is a bit simple. And finally I would like you to
explain to me what I think it is a joke, the one of the "erector".

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From jgrimbert@free.fr:
The wall needs more work to reach the technic level of the models.

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From jouni@mikrobitti.fi:
Nice Meccanos, wealthy with detail. Too bad you didn't have the time/energy to
give equal focus on the background and the floor textures.
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From p.gibellini@teinos.com:
Meccano pieces are very nice.
The room could be better.

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From bertram.henze@t-online.de:
I used to play with this kind of metal construction kit, when I was a boy. What
I miss a bit is the "feel" of screws tightened and loosened a hundred times and
scratched accordingly, of tin sheets bent this way and that so often that the
surface is bumpy and the paint starts to peel - in short all the traces of use
that optically distinguish metal from paper and cardboard. Try next time.

