RENDERING


decorators3
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Hi

 

I've attached a screen shot of  an exterior rendering I did for a client.  Can someone tell me if this is good and how I can improve on my rendering techniques.  Guessing its a mix of lighting and adjustments  plus I notice  the various backdrops  make a huge difference in the overall color effect    .. Am I on the right track??

 

all advice is welcome  

 

Many thanks Levina

RENDERING.png

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On 10/31/2024 at 8:13 AM, decorators3 said:

all advice is welcome  

1) watch the video posted by Gawdzira - rendering in Chief is basically photography 101

 

2) your materials on the building are not high enough quality.  
 

3) Your main image is about selling the design. You don’t have to include every square inch of the facade, that’s what the plans and elevations are for.
 

Try to follow a perspective like the attached image…
 

image.jpeg
 

(maybe not relevant to the post, but your building violates every fire code in the book)

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1 hour ago, Michael_Gia said:

1) watch the video posted by Gawdzira - rendering in Chief is basically photography 101

 

2) your materials on the building are not high enough quality.  
 

3) Your main image is about selling the design. You don’t have to include every square inch of the facade, that’s what the plans and elevations are for.
 

Try to follow a perspective like the attached image…
 

image.jpeg
 

(maybe not relevant to the post, but your building violates every fire code in the book)

This is very good. The perspective is viewed as from a car driving by.

 

image.thumb.png.283daf1509177fa3d2b6054c1023db16.png

Lavina, when viewed from the driveway or lawn, set the camera at about 5' from grade - currently you are standing about 8'ish high. More sky, less ground. Your window reflections are looking really good! As Jim said, move the sun around to help cast more shadow. This is not always the case depending on the look you are after, but shadows can help give more life to a more simple structure. Download PixPlant and start to create your own materials. Better materials as Michael mentioned.

 

 

 

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I know there are people with the time, skill and budget to create very photo real images. My preference for most presentations is using the PBR with line overlays. I generally have the line thickness set to .25 for a very subtle punch out of edges but it still keeps it on the sketch render end of the rendering spectrum. I rarely use a 3d tree for that reason since that would be a graphic mess.

image.thumb.png.515352d91377134d8a5d8747eb981bdb.png

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I thank you all for your comments - this forum is soo good.  This client  sent me their plans,   also the materials and colors they wanted for the exterior  as well as the window style... I'm liking the idea of people, cars etc,,, CA only has silhouettes.. where can I get people ... 

 

I am going to follow   all of your suggestions

 

Thanks a lot -- 60% of my renderings are exterior so I'm really wanting to get it as good as I can

 is there a particular version of PIXPLANT I should download

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2 hours ago, decorators3 said:

where to find people !!

There may be some 3D people in Chief -- not exactly sure.  I am no render pro so I'll defer to the forum experts.  But, one trick is to add people later to the rendering as simple 2D images or "decals" using Photoshop or Gimp.  An old coworker of mine used this technique a lot -- he was really great at 3D renders -- and I thought it was really effective and convincing.  Another advantage is it is fast.  Here's an example (done in Revit) that shows the technique:

 

image.thumb.png.1dc011fca04412f784c773027a68818b.png

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1 minute ago, JKEdmo said:

There may be some 3D people in Chief -- not exactly sure.  I am no render pro so I'll defer to the forum experts.  But, one trick is to add people later to the rendering as simple 2D images or "decals" using Photoshop or Gimp.  An old coworker of mine used this technique a lot -- he was really great at 3D renders -- and I thought it was really effective and convincing.  Another advantage is it is fast.  Here's an example (done in Revit) that shows the technique:

 

image.thumb.png.1dc011fca04412f784c773027a68818b.png

Thanks Jim! 

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3 hours ago, stevenyhof said:

This is very good. The perspective is viewed as from a car driving by.

 

image.thumb.png.283daf1509177fa3d2b6054c1023db16.png

Lavina, when viewed from the driveway or lawn, set the camera at about 5' from grade - currently you are standing about 8'ish high. More sky, less ground. Your window reflections are looking really good! As Jim said, move the sun around to help cast more shadow. This is not always the case depending on the look you are after, but shadows can help give more life to a more simple structure. Download PixPlant and start to create your own materials. Better materials as Michael mentioned.

 

 

 

Hi Steve

 

What was the site you mentioned in one of your posts where I can download free HDRI scenery and people.  I did download just about all your backdrops-  water splashes- shadow trees-etc. but mid September I had a computer virus which knocked out my CA program and all the downloads I had taken from you.. BTW  Thanks

1 hour ago, stevenyhof said:

This is very good. The perspective is viewed as from a car driving by.

 

image.thumb.png.283daf1509177fa3d2b6054c1023db16.png

Lavina, when viewed from the driveway or lawn, set the camera at about 5' from grade - currently you are standing about 8'ish high. More sky, less ground. Your window reflections are looking really good! As Jim said, move the sun around to help cast more shadow. This is not always the case depending on the look you are after, but shadows can help give more life to a more simple structure. Download PixPlant and start to create your own materials. Better materials as Michael mentioned.

 

 

 

thanks Steve

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On 11/2/2024 at 6:28 PM, stevenyhof said:

This is very good. The perspective is viewed as from a car driving by.

 

image.thumb.png.283daf1509177fa3d2b6054c1023db16.png

Lavina, when viewed from the driveway or lawn, set the camera at about 5' from grade - currently you are standing about 8'ish high. More sky, less ground. Your window reflections are looking really good! As Jim said, move the sun around to help cast more shadow. This is not always the case depending on the look you are after, but shadows can help give more life to a more simple structure. Download PixPlant and start to create your own materials. Better materials as Michael mentioned.

 

Hi Steve attached is the planfor ca steve.plan

 

 

for ca steve.plan

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On 11/2/2024 at 6:28 PM, stevenyhof said:

This is very good. The perspective is viewed as from a car driving by.

 

image.thumb.png.283daf1509177fa3d2b6054c1023db16.png

Lavina, when viewed from the driveway or lawn, set the camera at about 5' from grade - currently you are standing about 8'ish high. More sky, less ground. Your window reflections are looking really good! As Jim said, move the sun around to help cast more shadow. This is not always the case depending on the look you are after, but shadows can help give more life to a more simple structure. Download PixPlant and start to create your own materials. Better materials as Michael mentioned.

 

Hi Steve

Plan attached- removed a lot of excess so it could upload

 

 

for ca steve.plan

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In my experience renderings come down to a few major things. Having the right backdrop so that it is not throwing colors into your rendering you don't want. Having really good materials. Materials seem to be one of the biggest things that make my renderings look really good or really bad. I run the ACES rendering with pretty much out of the box settings. I use only the backdrop for lighting. This ranges anywhere from 18k to 20k outside and 2k to 7k inside. Once I am ready to do my rendering I bump up the sharpening, set the sample range from 800 to 2500 depending on the shot, and make sure ambient occlusion is 100%. From there it is just messing with it until you get the scene to look right. Rene Rabbitt has a really good VIP YouTube channel that I have picked up a ton of tricks with for rendering. I would highly suggest giving it a try. This is one I am playing with right now. When Chief launched X16 it really gave us the ability to do some really cool renders.

Front.jpg

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