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NPR Residential Renderings

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  • G Offline
    Gaieus
    last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 05:28

    From the reflection in the windows, it seems you are (also) using some rendering software in the workflow (unless it is some post-pro).

    Gai...

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    • D Offline
      d12dozr
      last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 05:44

      Nice style! πŸ‘

      One thing that may help is to hide the outer lines on the 2D cutout trees in Sketchup before exporting. The lines are most noticeable in the foreground entourage.

      3D Printing with SketchUp Book
      http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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      • G Offline
        Gaieus
        last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 05:58

        True.

        See, Brad, I told you that I have no eyes!
        πŸ˜„

        Gai...

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        • T Offline
          turbobrad
          last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 06:33

          @gaieus said:

          From the reflection in the windows, it seems you are (also) using some rendering software in the workflow (unless it is some post-pro).

          I used rendering software to create the soft shadows. They were rendered over a clay model essentially, and then merged with the SketchUp image in Photoshop. I also used Painter to fill in the windows.

          BradE

          BradE
          Dean3Design

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          • T Offline
            turbobrad
            last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 06:33

            @d12dozr said:

            Nice style! πŸ‘

            One thing that may help is to hide the outer lines on the 2D cutout trees in Sketchup before exporting. The lines are most noticeable in the foreground entourage.

            Thanks d12dozr. I added those lines intentionally to help distinguish the foreground trees from the background. In some ways I think it adds an interesting rawness to the images. On the other hand, I haven't decided if they'll stay or go. I'm leaning towards go. They are a bit "edgy" πŸ˜„ .

            BradE

            BradE
            Dean3Design

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            • D Offline
              d12dozr
              last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 06:51

              @turbobrad said:

              They are a bit "edgy" πŸ˜„ .

              BradE

              πŸ˜† I see the benefit for the sketchy style, Brad..I mentioned it as they were just distracting my focus from the house.

              3D Printing with SketchUp Book
              http://goo.gl/f7ooYh

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              • S Offline
                Stinkie
                last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 06:58

                @turbobrad said:

                I added those lines intentionally to help distinguish the foreground trees from the background. In some ways I think it adds an interesting rawness to the images. On the other hand, I haven't decided if they'll stay or go. I'm leaning towards go. They are a bit "edgy" πŸ˜„ .

                Keep 'em, keep 'em! They look great. πŸ‘

                Nice models and images!

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                • M Offline
                  majid
                  last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 07:03

                  it's really nice mood.
                  also you may don't do any render ,if use my trick here: http://www.sketchupartists.org/tutorials/sketchup-and-photoshop/create-a-fake-render-in-photoshop/

                  what about foreground tree edges? are you still keeping them? or just maybe color-brightness perspective is enough?

                  My inspiring A, B, Sketches book: https://sketchucation.com/shop/books/intermediate/2612-alphabet-inspired-sketches--inspiring-drills-for-architects--3d-artists-and-designers-

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                  • D Offline
                    Daniel
                    last edited by 21 Jan 2011, 14:47

                    Very nice, Brad. One thing I noticed, that you might want to correct, is that the stone(?) base on the second and third images is washed out - hard to tell what the material is.

                    My avatar is an anachronism.

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                    • A Offline
                      allanx
                      last edited by 22 Jan 2011, 00:10

                      Hi Brad,

                      Nice style, I especially like how you render the house...play of shadows and color very inspiring....

                      I would like to comment on the trees, they are very washout...try to balance that in your composition.

                      allanx

                      [Portfolio](https://www.coroflot.com/designers/work-stream?id)

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                      • T Offline
                        tomsdesk
                        last edited by 22 Jan 2011, 04:41

                        Lovely!

                        http://www.tomsdesk.moonfruit.com/
                        2.5D Trees & Shrubs!

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                        • H Offline
                          Horseman04
                          last edited by 22 Jan 2011, 19:04

                          Fantastic stuff. I'd love to see some screen shots during the process so I can see how the magic happens. πŸ˜„

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                          • B Offline
                            Bryan K
                            last edited by 23 Jan 2011, 00:36

                            You've captured a classic architectural rendering style. One that I've loved since I was a kid.

                            Very nice designs as well.

                            See my portfolio at https://delphiscousin.blogspot.com/

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                            • T Offline
                              turbobrad
                              last edited by 23 Jan 2011, 07:21

                              Thanks everyone for having a look. Your suggestions are definitely appreciated.

                              majid, great tutorial, thanks.

                              BradE
                              Dean3Design

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