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    Interior Rendering - SketchUp & Maxwell Render

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    • FrederikF Offline
      Frederik
      last edited by

      Nice renders indeed... πŸ˜„

      Don't know if it's a desired effect that they all are quite grainy...? πŸ˜•
      Also... They seem a tad too bright for my taste... 😐

      Hope you don't mind, I just took them into Adobe Lightroom, where you can adjust the white-balance, tone as well as remove noise/grain...


      Kitchen Angle 2 Final 030314_filtered-2.jpg

      Cheers
      Kim Frederik

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      • neetsN Offline
        neets
        last edited by

        Frederik,

        I don't mind you playing around at all - the problem with adjusting contrast, saturation levels etc. is that when these images PRINT, they are far too dark. I have conducted limited research into the problem of images appearing brighter on screen than they do in print, which has been made even more problematic because of todays backlit monitors. The image that you think appears too bright on screen will be much darker on paper and because these are usually presented on hard copy, I have to take that into consideration when finalising the image settings. I have had to calibrate my laptop to try and gauge how the image will appear when printed, as opposed to how it appears on screen.

        The graininess is not something I strive to achieve! These images were rendered for a continuous 40 hours using my lowly laptop. When they are presented on paper, they are smaller and therefore the noise is less noticeable. My gripe with removing noise is that it blurs the detail in the overall image. I'm hoping that when I purchase a dedicated rendering workstation that is more powerful, that I will be able to achieve crisper images.

        Anita

        Interested to know more about me and my 3D Visualisation work? Then you want to click right here: http://anitabrowndesignstudio.com/

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        • ElibjrE Offline
          Elibjr
          last edited by

          @unknownuser said:

          Frederik,

          I don't mind you playing around at all - the problem with adjusting contrast, saturation levels etc. is that when these images PRINT, they are far too dark. I have conducted limited research into the problem of images appearing brighter on screen than they do in print, which has been made even more problematic because of todays backlit monitors. The image that you think appears too bright on screen will be much darker on paper and because these are usually presented on hard copy, I have to take that into consideration when finalising the image settings. I have had to calibrate my laptop to try and gauge how the image will appear when printed, as opposed to how it appears on screen.

          The graininess is not something I strive to achieve! These images were rendered for a continuous 40 hours using my lowly laptop. When they are presented on paper, they are smaller and therefore the noise is less noticeable. My gripe with removing noise is that it blurs the detail in the overall image. I'm hoping that when I purchase a dedicated rendering workstation that is more powerful, that I will be able to achieve crisper images.

          Anita

          I have noticed with Maxwell Render (if you have not already) try to use mxm materials and lights if you are going to be doing final renders. I have found that it helps with render time and graininess.

          EB

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          • FrederikF Offline
            Frederik
            last edited by

            @unknownuser said:

            ...the problem with adjusting contrast, saturation levels etc. is that when these images PRINT, they are far too dark.

            That's a fair and valid point... πŸ‘

            Cheers
            Kim Frederik

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            • RichardR Offline
              Richard
              last edited by

              @frederik said:

              @unknownuser said:

              ...the problem with adjusting contrast, saturation levels etc. is that when these images PRINT, they are far too dark.

              That's a fair and valid point... πŸ‘

              That depends on the media you are printing on to! Meaning that the media isn't accepting enough ink loading.

              In your scene what are the values of the whites used? They should be limited to 220,220,220 RGB. Could account for the amount of noise.

              [BUILTBRAND.COM.AU](http://builtbrand.com.au/)

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              • neetsN Offline
                neets
                last edited by

                Hi Richard, that's an excellent point re: RGB of white. I think I used 240, 240, 240. I have since reduced it to 220, 220, 220 and it works a treat πŸ˜‰

                Although, I still have to disagree with your opinion re: not enough ink loading. When I print the renders, I use a professional printing company and the initial result can still be too dark. I usually have to fiddle with the exposure settings (or sometimes go back to the render and adjust the ISO etc.) and then try printing it again. They have also confirmed that most images will always print darker than on screen.

                Interested to know more about me and my 3D Visualisation work? Then you want to click right here: http://anitabrowndesignstudio.com/

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                • Bryan KB Offline
                  Bryan K
                  last edited by

                  Very nice!

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

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                  • jo-keJ Offline
                    jo-ke
                    last edited by

                    usually I use Topaz Denoise for noise reduction. It is a usefull plugin for Photoshop.

                    http://www.zz7.de

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                    • neetsN Offline
                      neets
                      last edited by

                      Thanks for that tip πŸ˜„ I've heard lots of good things about Topaz!

                      Interested to know more about me and my 3D Visualisation work? Then you want to click right here: http://anitabrowndesignstudio.com/

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                      • neetsN Offline
                        neets
                        last edited by

                        @bryan k said:

                        Very nice!

                        Thank you!

                        Interested to know more about me and my 3D Visualisation work? Then you want to click right here: http://anitabrowndesignstudio.com/

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