Richard,
I am curious......do you mean use 2 point perspective(s)?
Thanks,
Charlie
Well yes but not by forcing them with SU's camera. Just set it up that way.
Can you explain what you mean by "just set it up that way".
I often fuss with SU camera FOV and save my scenes.
(getting things as vertical as I can)
Is this what you mean by forcing SU's camera?
Thanks,
Charlie
Ok I should probably explain better. If just for NPR then I'd suggest the two point perspective camera can work fine. If rendering - any heavy forcing can make things look a bit weird, like an excessive crop.
Interesting, but light poles seen way too thick (and no debris, graffiti, broken lights?)
hellnbak :
I make sure there is no graffiti....garbage on the ground ! But, you gotta look at this way........Hurricane Sandy won't be able to knock those light poles down :smile:
Thanks Bryan K I do appreciate it. I have so much to learn!!! I keep trying all kinds of shapes and styles. I am hoping to become good like architect and designer Guy Dreier, check him out. http://www.guydreierdesigns.com/
When I look at his work I know I am nowhere near closed to knowing what I need to know to become that good. Its a long road ahead for sure haha
was trying to look at the positives with my first post. your reply makes me think you missed the point I was trying to make. google cabin and cabin interiors and maybe you'll better get what I'm driving at. When I look at your render I like the lighting, panorama . colors of the various materials but it doesn't say "cabin in the mountains" to me , more like a condo.... I think the average person viewing the image would be hard pressed to say it evokes the feel of a country cabin.
tuna1957 :
No problem. I accept what you're saying. Thanks for your input.
garystan