:Police Precinct:
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Wow Jason, really nice work. You really captured the feel of an old city building. Spot on!
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woooow...these have to be the most atmospheric renderings i've seen on this forum!! absolutly stunning!
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Really nice render, Congrats...
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Wow! I feel like I'm about to be booked.
No way NYPD floor that clean though. -
Very nice.
I like the atmosphere!
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Excellent work.
Really impressive.
WOW.@unknownuser said:
No way NYPD floor that clean though
or anywhere in the world.
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That is fantastic.
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just noticed one thing: on the second picture right above the clock there are reflections of the lamps on the column which i don't think is intended to be.
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Stunning
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Excellent stuff, So is this for a set design?
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thanks guys.
yes, carloh..that paint should definitely not be that reflective..should've lessened that in pshop for sure...
pete.. yeah, this is for a pretty large set. its about 150'x75'. Its based on an actual location that the pilot was shot in, and then condensed a bit based on the limitations of the stage, etc. i'm hoping to get over to the stage after its built because I'd love to see how they actually build the vaulted ceiling. This is all pretty new to me.
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Wonderful renders. Sounds like a great job!
LOL I was thinking it was going to be a true story about some pilot guy who gets shot while in a police station. Only part way down my first cup of coffee
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Obviously you are acting as the set designer or working with the set designer, but what are your interactions with the director of photography, the art director, the juicers, and the key grip? Are they also taking advantage of the tool? Is your client playing with the model in 3D or just looking at static output? I did a portrait of the CEO of US Air and I premodeled a location in the lobby that had a lot of airplane replicas in large scale. When I walked in I knew where my lights would be, where the airplane replicas had to be in relation to the person. What focal length lens I needed. I set up, called the guy in his office and said, "I'm ready for you." When he came down I said stand on the tape on the floor, put your hand on the model plane, look up, smile like you just completed a merger, look this way, tilt your head, click, click, click. Thank you. It works for me, but I there are a lot of "old school types" that don' get the labor saving potential. A little work on the front end saves a lot of logistics on the back end.
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That's the idea, Roger.. but like you said...they're old school and haven't embraced technology yet and can only afford to keep me on for just so long. Hell...they still draft alot of TV/film stuff by hand in NYC!
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Jason, I realize you posted the Police Precinct some time ago but as I recently joined I have just run into them. This is great set design work. I was interested in how you go from SU models and renderings to plans for the construction crew to build from. You've got a seriously impressive set (75'x150'!)which then needed to be translated into the real world.
I did see that you said your SU model was used to resolve questions on the complicated ceiling construction which made me think that maybe they were not using your model to create the construction plans. I currently started using SU and Layout to create set designs / plans / and renderings but I am very interested in how you work and what you do after your rendering stage. Also, seeing as this was months ago I thought you could say what show it was for as I would love to see the final footage and how the set came out on camera. Cheers, Tim Larsen
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