Twilight render...
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These are really good renders, how about the rendering time?
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A Mac version will come, although I'm not sure exactly when...
Let me check and get back to you and others...@tomsdesk said:
How long in general do you have to let them cook to get rid of the grainy? How long did these take?
That's a tough question to answer... It depends on so many things...
Output resolution, materials used, lights used in the scene, complexity of the scene etc., etc...Please note that Twilight render comes with both biased (photon mapping) presets, which are quite fast, as well as the more advanced unbiased presets (MLT, BiPT), which will take longer to render, but where the lightning will make them look more real...
@tomsdesk said:
Can Twilight do quick and lovely clay renders (but with reflective windows) using some simple presets?
Yes...
Go to the Twilight website... Download the demo version, check out the tutorials to get the basics and then test away...
@edmon242004 said:
These are really good renders, how about the rendering time?
Thanks...
For this scene it was a couple of hours on a single core computer...
Please go see the Twilight Forum and check out the Gallery section, where we've posted several renders with information on time etc...
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@frederik said:
A Mac version will come, although I'm not sure exactly when...
Let me check and get back to you and others...Okay great, I'll be waiting! ;D
Cheers,
Roevens Johannes -
hi kim,
this is a very welcome newcomer. it looks very good. from what i have seen it is kerkythea turned into a sketchup plugin. or am i wrong?
as usual, the mac version lags behind. i do hope a mac version is released soon.
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I am really excited about this, just a real shame there is no mac version.
I will download and try out on my work pc. -
Been playing with the demo and I like it a lot. A good solution for a good price. Should win a lot of fans very quickly.
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I'm currently looking for an interior render solution (I have exteriors well covered), definitely gonna give this a go, hopefully it will solve my needs.
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@edson said:
... from what i have seen it is kerkythea turned into a sketchup plugin. or am i wrong?
well, our dream was to have the power of KT inside of SketchUp, but then to fix what we found difficult with KT. So, to keep all positives, lose any negatives (like having to re-export and re-merge model geometry any time we change our model.)
The main bottleneck for KT users, new or old, was the creation of good materials. Turning your SketchUp materials into physically accurate high quality materials is simple now with Twilight.
Check out the video tutorials. (Intermediate Tutorial #1 is specifically on materials, as well as the first Getting Started Tutorial.)
The other main problem for most new users of KT was the choice of the right rendering settings. There is an "easy" set of render settings to choose "out of the box" with Twilight, and should serve well in almost all architectural-type rendering situations.
The main annoyance was re-exporting models after changes, and there is no more exporting with Twilight.
Setting up lights used to be a bit more difficult, now lighting, even IES lights, is fun in Twilight. -
Fletch / Kim, this looks great. Fine idea. Nice price. Only one question.... does this mean you're parting ways from Giannis and Thea Render?
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@rob d said:
does this mean you're parting ways from Giannis and Thea Render?
Most definitely not...
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That's what I wanted to hear! Thanks Kim
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kim and fletch,
your comments and descriptions left me with a watering mouth, not to mention a kind of murderous envy of all of you windows users.
regards,
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very nice
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Nice work. Colors on the second render looks better and makes room look brighter.
Its been quiet here and i was wondering where everybody went. No body told me. -
@rob d said:
... does this mean you're parting ways from Giannis
without Giannis, Twilight Render would not be possible.ps - Frederik, love your renders, man! Keep 'em coming!
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@edson said:
kim and fletch,
your comments and descriptions left me with a watering mouth, not to mention a kind of murderous envy of all of you windows users.
Edson, I am running it on a mac using VMware Fusion and all seems fine.
I have to say I am loving this software!!! Great job guys
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Cheers, Dylan...
Much appreciated and encouraging...Credit for this application should really go to Chris (aka Avariant) and Fletch...
I'm just part of the beta- and support team... -
Tom,
As for clay renders (as I was also interested in this part), just made a quick render at 1024 pixels width. I used the highest preset with soft shadows and came out in 3:47 minutes nicely.
The only material I "kept" was the water surface (aka "shiny window" if you like, in architectural renders) but also kept the cheesy SU water material so obviously it doesn't look very good.Then I tried with a much more reflective water (plus more bumps) and this one came out in 3:55
Still the native SU sky makes the water a bit too "bluish" - I guess I need some sky backgrounds to make it nicer looking (also experimenting more with water surfaces)(Model is a reconstruction of a 4th century Roman Fortress on the Danubian frontier excavated by Zsolt MrΓ‘v of the National Museum of Hungary and modelled by GΓ‘bor OrbΓ‘n aka "Kephalos")
Edit: I used only one core on my machine for both images.
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I like the fortress Gaius! Is there much of it left on the site?
Here's an experimental image just to show what can be done with a 3 minute render and 3 minutes processing in GIMP. Twilight will be great in combination with usual sketchup output for all types of Dennis output etc. This just needs SU sketchy line image over the top and its done. -
Unfortunately not too much is left. The area is poor in stone material so later inhabitants used these forts as quarries practically.
I also wouldn't agree with some of the details (neither does "Kephalos") but the other archaeologist (who gigs it) insisted. That big, fat tower has a wall of 3 metres in width. I really doubt that it went all the way to the top like this (with those small windows) but you know, the customer is always right.
Nice Gimping BTW!
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