Thea or maxwell?
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And one thing that makes Maxwell stand out is the use of Studio, an added program you can use to built huge models. I can render combinations of SU models that would not even open in SU. Once you get into photorealism its important to add detail to your models. Then quickly you will find that rendering within SU is not an option. We render SU models with cars and organic shapes found on the web that look better than real. Try to import those in SU and your lost.
Francois
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You can do the same with Thea - it is a standalone rendering packages and supports different file formats. Seems You never tried Thea, no? Thea is faster and the price is better. And the quality is very subjective - lower quality but faster rendering can get You a contract in 80% of the time!
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In terms of speed I don't think Thea will get me more contracts. We have 8cores mac's and in a matter of minutes we have renders good enough for communication and in a matter of hours for large prints. I am looking at +100Mb files. Actually contracts are gotten in the pub and at casual meetings with friends..... and consistently providing very high quality work.
If you are into this profession the costs of Thea, Vray or Maxwell is no issue at all. Its paid for in a matter of a few projects, less then months. Its the time invested in the knowhow that can be expensive.Its amazing how demanding archviz really is, the slightest difference in how a pane of glass or brickwall renders makes the image look great or not good at all. For these slight differences we render with Maxwell. It saves us a lot of time finetuning an image.
If you render cars and airplanes with a lot of reflective materials your render engine is less of an issue. Those kind of images look good with most app's. But when you start to do archviz with all sorts of glass and glassprints, rough materials and materials with a lot of characteristics under different types of light and atmosphere you need the best you can get and even then in most cases its still very hard to get it right. What we can't do with Vray and Modo works out in Maxwell.Francois
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@frv said:
In terms of speed I don't think Thea will get me more contracts. We have 8cores mac's and in a matter of minutes we have renders good enough for communication and in a matter of hours for large prints. I am looking at +100Mb files. Actually contracts are gotten in the pub and at casual meetings with friends..... and consistently providing very high quality work.
If you are into this profession the costs of Thea, Vray or Maxwell is no issue at all. Its paid for in a matter of a few projects, less then months. Its the time invested in the knowhow that can be expensive.Its amazing how demanding archviz really is, the slightest difference in how a pane of glass or brickwall renders makes the image look great or not good at all. For these slight differences we render with Maxwell. It saves us a lot of time finetuning an image.
If you render cars and airplanes with a lot of reflective materials your render engine is less of an issue. Those kind of images look good with most app's. But when you start to do archviz with all sorts of glass and glassprints, rough materials and materials with a lot of characteristics under different types of light and atmosphere you need the best you can get and even then in most cases its still very hard to get it right. What we can't do with Vray and Modo works out in Maxwell.Francois
He, he - very funny and constricted outlook! Come to my country and try to live with 150$ a month - my mom's pension! Then maybe You can see how different a world can be! When I worked in the USA and talked to people about how we are living they always thought I'm joking. Not to say how was at the socialism's regime! So, the quality of the rendered glass doesn't matter at all.
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My wife is from the Philippines and I assure I know how people live without money. But I do not expect them to buy render applications. And neither would I if my clients would not make up for the costs.
Buts its funny that even in countries without money, the color of the rendered glass matters as much as anywere else. That's why a few of the best photographers and filmmakers come from the Philippines.
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One thing is to know, another is to live it as we do! That is why I'm using Kerkythea and still have happy clients. Even I hardly render - the SketchUP's native view is in most cases enough. And 90% of the software here is pirated - so we have unlimited choices And the funny thing is that I worked as a photographer on a cruise ship with a lot of philipinos - mamagayo Making 500-700 pictures of the guest per day - this is for one photographer, I can assure You that the quantity really matters!
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About those challenging materials, fortunately there are several renderers that can handle complex materials and light in physically accurate way, where materials rough or no. http://forums.cgsociety.org/showthread.php?p=6614442
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