This is fantastic!
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Interesting topic, does anyone have an idea of what a market based acceptable price for such a work would be?
And how much a render farm costs for such project?one more...
Who would commission an animated project like this?
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solo wrote:
Interesting topic, does anyone have an idea of what a market based acceptable price for such a work would be?I'm guessing very roughly somewhere between $10,000 and $20,000 depending on output quality (I'm converting Pounds to Dollars at 1:2, I've no idea what the actual US going rate would be). I know I'd need a couple of months to attempt something like that (plus 2 weeks learning the software!)... ehm and about another month to render it on my sole laptop Confused .
solo wrote:
And how much a render farm costs for such project?I don't even know if anyone does rent out render farms- it'd be insanely expensive to keep enough render programs (and all their nodes) installed and up-to-date enough to serve multiple clients using different progs.
solo wrote:
Who would commission an animated project like this?Museums, charitable conservation foundations, tv, can't really think of anyone else- a tiny market.
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There are actually quite a few render farm services, here are just a coulpe that have online price "quotes", I guess if you're getting that kind of money you can afford these services, http://www.rebusfarm.com/ http://www.rendercore.com/rendercoreweb/index.do
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Has this guy modelled Falling Water for anything in particular, or is it just a portfolio piece; I'm suspecting it's the latter. I'm thinking perhaps he is angling his services more at reconstruction for heritage reasons, maybe a museum display or the History Channel.
Does he actually have architectural or design based clients? I would love his skills, but are there any significant commercial benefit for an architectural client (unless we are talking something on the scale of a new Olympic arena) to spend that much money on presentation? Where I live, developers are very tight with there money. The money goes on the development. Visualisation is kept to a minimum.
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Alpro,
Thanks for the links- very interesting reading.
I entered some details for a quote:
1800 Frames (based on a 1 minute animation Censored to protect your privacy 30 fps)
Render time per frame- 120 mins
3GHz processor Censored to protect your privacy 0.29 Euros per GHz hourCost- 9630.9 Euros, 13194.30 USD
Yikes! Imagine if the render didn't turn out the way you wanted.
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Eric- it looks like your link has used up all his bandwidth- he's had to take the movie off his site. He must be amazed at the stats he's suddenly getting.
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Well that blows. At least I got to see the whole thing on my home computer.
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Well, at least it was not our fault, visiting his website.
(much thanks for the link,Boofredlay)I contacted him and he told me it was because of two places who provided more than 26.000 visits on Thursday 13 with peaks of 500 people trying to access his server.
Maybe he comes one day to this forum and say hello Smile
Cheers
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Considering what I was saying about his pricing, maybe it wouldn't be best if he came here. Rolling Eyes
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this video along with some more are available now at,
http://es.youtube.com/etereaestudios
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