Updated my gallery
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I've updated my gallery with some recent archviz images.
Modelled in SketchUp and rendered in Vray for SketchUp and composited in Photoshop.Here is a small example of before and after.
To see more go to: http://www.pixero.com -> Gallery section -> Visualisering
What do you think?
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Wow, what a great before and after Jan.
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Even the sky is brighter and the trees look healthier!
Well, seriously, nice job, really!
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Very well done.
Scott
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Although the shadows on the walls facing the camera on the building to the left doesn't correspond to the shadows on the building to the right, it sure looks brilliant...
What render app. have you been using..?? -
@frederik said:
Although the shadows on the walls facing the camera on the building to the left doesn't correspond to the shadows on the building to the right, it sure looks brilliant...
What render app. have you been using..??Thanks for your comments all!
Frederik, Actually the shadow on the right building is quite right. I had a lowres photo from a sunny day that shows shadows from some trees out of frame that very closly IMHO matches the "after" image.
Ive rendered with Vray for SketchUp but I've learnt that much can be fixed post render in Photoshop in less time and with great results. The raw render doesnt look very exiting.
I also render a separate image with all materials set to different bright colors. That way its very easy to make precise selections in Photoshop for color corrections and more. -
@pixero said:
Frederik, Actually the shadow on the right building is quite right.
I didn't say it was wrong...
I said the shadow doesn't match/correspond on both buildings...Nevertheless - Like I also said it's looking BRILLIANT..!!
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Frederik, lets just call it "artistic freedom"
I didnt want to draw the eye out of the image with to much happening on that side.Still, there are more pics in the gallery...
(For information most images are 3000-5000 pixels wide so these scaled down versions lose a lot of detail.)
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Your "warm autumn" lighting is so tasty! How do you achieve it?
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@rv1974 said:
Your "warm autumn" lighting is so tasty! How do you achieve it?
I render in VRayIMG format then convert to EXR (a HDR format) so I can re-expose the render in Photoshop. Then I use lots of color correction, a new sky, reflections and trees, people and other bits and pieces and then painted shadows in a blue/purple hue to fit the lighting I'm after. I've learnt a lot from some mattepainting tutorials.
Its just that I was going for a spring/early summer feeling...
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