I have seen photos of the almost purplish-blue Rocky Mountains in the far distance, but they are never quite that blue in the Appalachians (except during certain sunsets), particularly not in the summertime. Actually, at enough distance here in summer weather, the mountains eventually just blend with the sky in that bluish/whitish haze. I haven't been able to recreate that yet in TS; as you can see in my latest screenies below there is still a sharp distinction of mountain ridge against the sky. I'll keep thinking about how to do that, but in the meantime, I have "hazed" the sky and I've made some adjustments to fog and fog colour again and am pretty happy with the view I have now for Summer at Noon (just 50,000 other TOD's to change now!

). It appears that I am terrible at transposing the numbers to my posts (thanks for the headsup, papa) so I think I'll use the cut/paste method from now on

:
<DistantTerrainColour>
<cHcColour>
<Red d:type="sFloat32" d:alt_encoding="000000003D9BCD3F" d:precision="string">0.2313</Red>
<Green d:type="sFloat32" d:alt_encoding="000000003D9BCD3F" d:precision="string">0.2313</Green>
<Blue d:type="sFloat32" d:alt_encoding="00000040AF94D53F" d:precision="string">0.3372</Blue>
<Alpha d:type="sFloat32" d:alt_encoding="0000000000000000" d:precision="string">0.0000</Alpha>
</cHcColour>
</DistantTerrainColour>
And those Azimuth settings should have been negative, of course: -0.24, -0.67, -1.08
Screenshot_Copy of C&O Alleghany_37.74859--80.46323_12-01-07.jpg
Screenshot_Copy of C&O Alleghany_37.74778--80.46491_12-03-02.jpg
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