Rendering close to reality!
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‎2007-06-07
03:48 PM
- last edited on
‎2023-05-11
12:25 PM
by
Noemi Balogh

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‎2007-06-07 10:44 PM
a very good friend from chile would do this for u

in minutes
Reality ?? DONT THINK SO !!!
AC V6 to V18 - RVT V11 to V16
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‎2007-06-07 11:10 PM
Rakela wrote:The whole point is that the customer wants renderings that dont look like renderings.He wants his customers to believe that the building is built so they can book without hesitating and thats the reason for asking me if i can add custom furniture and tiles and wooden decks etch that he is going to use in the project.To make you realise what he needs i ll give you the adress of his web site where you can see the two villas that allready exist and he wants to add there two more before they are constracted for next years bookings (not schetches or cartoon style renderings). Take a look at this http://www.villa-senses.gr/ (by the way its not a bad idea to ask him to give me one of the villas for a week....god they are nice....!!!They look like perfect renderings...
or by hand !!
a very good friend from chile would do this for u
in minutes
Reality ?? DONT THINK SO !!!

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‎2007-06-08 12:11 AM
First of all it would be smart to define what your client recognize as "fotorealistic" and what are the deadlines. Since we have MaxwellRender and FryRender on the market "fotorealistic" got completly new meaning.
The example you posted is very eye-pleasing for sure, with this glare and bloom all over, but still not good enough to be taken as foto. From the other hand I've seen people looking at Lightworks render stiched with site background and asking "Is that a foto?"

Still if you want to achieve this level of reality with Artlantis you need to be an expert (judging from the gallery, no offence). Most of the render-line-by-line (
My advice is very much as Rakela's: find someone to do it for you this time it's no shame, you will have a lot of designing/modeling work to accoplish anyway. Money is not an issue, for example on the MaxwellRender forum there is a special job section where you can place an offer and you will see how much it may cost you. The last thing: if your client expect proffesional results he need to understand they are expensive. It's like with lawyers: the good ones are expensive the cheap ones will loose anyway.
Good luck mate!

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‎2007-06-08 02:20 AM
We spend a lot of time on this forum yapping and dreaming of how wonderful the next, fast, automatic exposure, quick preview, intuitive material mapping rendering engine is going to be. Beckett has it right in his play where two computer geeks converse between workstations: "Waiting for Graphisoft."
And we also spend a lot of time as individuals cursing how long it takes to tweak a basic image into something good, no matter what the rendering engine is.
Many users forget the most important aspect of illustrating their work: the entourage. If we spent a few minutes actually composing the story of the neighborhood in each scene, people who wouldn't give a flying puck [strong playoff memories] about architecture still engage with the image and support the design. And that's all you want: People saying "Yes."
You don't want any barriers to the recipient to say "Yes."
Like a tiny building with ugly textures a half-mile away. shuttered windows
This is the primary reason for hiring a professional illustrator: he takes the time to adjust lighting and compose the scene, building a narrative with the entourage. AND, he probably owns enough entourage to build a convincing scene with tree-like elements instead of emerald glass shards. He'll have the Arab Sheik guys to populate the rendering instead of those stale blonde women with short sleeves and the especially stale guy walking with the newspaper. I was in Los Angeles two years ago wandering the UCLA campus and there on a building site board is the guy walking with the newspaper. That guy's image is so old, if you took away the newspaper you'd find a narrow leather tie! Yikes.
My advice to users unhappy with their rendering is to spend more time with the human art of it and less trying to understand caustic decay and global illumination (not that they aren't great achievements).
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‎2007-06-08 07:13 AM
One of the guys at www.archpartners.com in Buenos Aires is a friend of mine, Raul Gioiosa. They have clients everywhere, so I would not think they can be extremely low cost. But they produce awesome work, which is what your client is wanting.
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‎2007-06-08 09:23 AM

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‎2007-06-08 09:34 AM
Do what interests you.
When Archicad arrived in my life, it made me curious as to what it might mean for me. Such a surprise to have Archicad help me be a successful artist.....
The other thing is how we communciate ideas better with the power of perspectives... here's a SketchRender and a LightWorks rendering overlaid in Photoshop - this is for Jacksonville's Airport Expansion...
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‎2007-06-08 10:53 AM
Dwight wrote:You are right dwight.Iam Civil Engineer obsesed with architecture.Thats why i did my second Msc in Architecture.I love Archicad and I love rendering.Its what i like .Its my job and my hobby.I realise that i have to stop when i m falling asleep on the keyboard and look outside the window. Buildings are my art and love them for the excitement they give me.The rendering you ve posted is superb for me cause I am on the artistic side of things but my customers unfortunately not.Hate all the structural design , statics etch and most of my customers think Im an architect even though i tell them all the time that Im a civil engineer! I ll try hard in my life to give the people around me the oportunity to live in a better looking world cause i live in a country that anarchy in construction is a very mild expression for what i see every day! To be honest about the job I was talking earlier Its not the money that i dont want to lose.I want it cause i need to get better and because i want one day to be able to give to a customer what ever they need.Of course that cant be done in a couple of moths....But i know well that I work harder under time pressure and i get better quicker.Do you think that is better to stay in archicad with artlantis and try harder to learn photoshop?
I get the drift that mastering all aspects of what computers can do for architects is bigger than what one person can learn. Life is too short.
Do what interests you.
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‎2007-06-08 11:03 AM
2) Maxwell and Fryrender are really easy ways to achieve good results with little tweaking. Especially for outdoors.
3) Noone in greece will ever pay the amount of work needed for great looking renders


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‎2007-06-08 11:20 AM
kritikos79 wrote:That is valid. Everyone needs Photoshop skill.
Do you think that is better to stay in archicad with artlantis and try harder to learn photoshop?