2011-02-26 10:43 PM - last edited on 2023-05-11 12:09 PM by Noemi Balogh
2011-03-01 02:57 AM
2011-03-01 11:04 AM
2011-03-01 06:32 PM
2011-03-01 07:30 PM
an uninformed clientIs there any other kind? I did a good looking render for a client that wanted a certain thing at a certain budget. And frankly what I came up with is a lot better than the sort of output I have seen from a lot of guys who do architectural imaging for a living. I'm sure if you look back into the recesses of your memory you will remember a time when your standards weren't as high and you were still learning. The fact is I concentrate my effort on design and documentation which frankly is a lot more important to my clients and the success of the job than a pretty picture and what little 'spare' time I get I generally put towards improving my documentation output or my service not my imaging. To be successful in business you need to understand where your strengths and your focus is, concentrate on that and not try and do everything. So don't be so elitist.
2011-03-02 08:11 AM
Dwight wrote:Ok so you have been dismissive, which in this instance is totally unnecessary and kind of lacks of respect to others and their work.
Thanks for defending me, but he’s right. I AM being dismissive.
I’m dismissing obsession with time-wasting, over-resolved renderings in situations where Archicad's surface textures lack the resolution to support them.
The retort “well, the client is satisfied” [with murky grey shadows and amateurish texture repeats, for instance] only reveals an uninformed client. Several of our colleagues produce renderings in pure white light because the client needs to match their paint chip when in reality, the passing sun and sky effects tint that chip away from a match all day long. In those cases, the client is an idiot, because the illustrator can easily show color decisions in different realities rather than an abstract condition.
It is our job [as designers AND illustrators] to inform clients about what is necessary in a situation – to have higher standards than they do.
And I reiterate: for maximum readability, images must be electronically ‘sharpened’ for specific distances and output methods - high rendering resolution is only part of the answer.
http://www.niksoftware.com/sharpenerpro/usa/entry.php