Just wanna share- newbie
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Nice job in the rendering. However, not sure if perhaps the glass surfaces would reflect the colors in the sky.
Regarding the design: While it may be customary in your culture, I perceive the complexity of the facades as a crowded palette. You threw everything at it. For instance, the "gate", or window, with the circles in it, while interesting, seem not to respect the angular geometry of other areas.
Same with the multitude of textures, although the upper "band" of brown texture seems to help unify. -
Nice rendering, rome, although it's cropped a bit too closely.
Also, agree with mitcorb - the design is a bit overdone - there's too much going on, and no unifying theme or design element. -
@fymoro said:
Hi Carlo and welcome,
Nice image, witch render engine and process did you use ?
Ive done it with Vray for SU but only the car is linked to Vray.
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@mitcorb said:
Nice job in the rendering. However, not sure if perhaps the glass surfaces would reflect the colors in the sky.
Regarding the design: While it may be customary in your culture, I perceive the complexity of the facades as a crowded palette. You threw everything at it. For instance, the "gate", or window, with the circles in it, while interesting, seem not to respect the angular geometry of other areas.
Same with the multitude of textures, although the upper "band" of brown texture seems to help unify.Thanks mitcorb
Your right the glass is my problem. I dont have such HDRI for the sky, Thats why I only put some blue background and edit it with PS.
About the design its culture based and the "gate", the circles intersects the black bars. I higly appreciate your visual ideas on the textures.
Thanks mitcorb.
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And I was worried about being too harsh and not supportive enough. Of course, all is not lost Everything is learning.
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Is the house that close to the street? It looks like about 5 feet away.
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@unknownuser said:
Is the house that close to the street? It looks like about 5 feet away.
Yes, its 3 meters away from the street.
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That does not look like 15 feet from the street.
That aside, the textures need some work.
There is a good deal of repeating on the stone.
There should be some displacement on the stone to give it more depth.
Personal preference, but the woman takes away from the image. Sorry but some short skirt getting into an austin martin says something other than "welcome home".
I agree the image is cropped far too close. It would be better to see more of how the structure impacts the surroundings.Scott
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The guacamaya in the sky, the proximity to the street, the louvered windows, the owner's name on the building, the use of concrete and stone, your name, and the extensive security measures all point to a tropical location in South America. At first I would have guessed Venezuela.
On the other hand, in Venezuela the windows would have steel bars up to the third floor. The name would be cut out of brass and say, "Quinta Obsena". Also the hex shaped windows are vaguely oriental. Lastly tilting the fencing in makes it easier to climb and brings intruders closer to the building. Would this be the Phillipines or Macau?
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@unknownuser said:
That does not look like 15 feet from the street.
That aside, the textures need some work.
There is a good deal of repeating on the stone.
There should be some displacement on the stone to give it more depth.
Personal preference, but the woman takes away from the image. Sorry but some short skirt getting into an austin martin says something other than "welcome home".
I agree the image is cropped far too close. It would be better to see more of how the structure impacts the surroundings.Scott
I believe that 3M = 9'.
Sorry but my laptop is an older version of acer that cannot handle displacement. I wish I have a powerful laptop.
Now, I'm just curious on that short skirted woman that says something? Other than "welcome home" but I do respect your point of view.
It's intentionally cropped far too close because the lot area is only 412 Square Meters.Thank you Scott
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@roger said:
The guacamaya in the sky, the proximity to the street, the louvered windows, the owner's name on the building, the use of concrete and stone, your name, and the extensive security measures all point to a tropical location in South America. At first I would have guessed Venezuela.
On the other hand, in Venezuela the windows would have steel bars up to the third floor. The name would be cut out of brass and say, "Quinta Obsena". Also the hex shaped windows are vaguely oriental. Lastly tilting the fencing in makes it easier to climb and brings intruders closer to the building. Would this be the Phillipines or Macau?
Wow.
Its Philippines, I presume that you are an International Architect.
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My bad. 3M does = 9ft. I need more coffee!
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I attended architecture school at Carnegie Mellon University, but graduated from the Industrial Design Department. I never dropped my interest in architecture however most of my work has been in graphic design and photography. My wife is from Venezuela and I worked for an international company for 16 years. In Venezuela they have those long tailed parrots. One year we visited the worlds tallest water fall, Angel Falls (982 meters). At the jungle camp where we stayed they had an open-air "churuata" (thatched roof structure)serving as a restaurant. As we walked past, I looked up and saw a flight of those parrots flying overhead. One pealed off and dove for the building, its wings and talons tucked in for speed. It was at terminal velocity when it shot through the open wall of the "churuata" and flared its wings,reached out with its talons and snaged a roast chicken from the plate of a middle aged matron sitting by herself for dinner. The bird then shot out the other side of the building and headed into the forest to enjoy its stolen dinner.
The lady? I think she is still sitting there with mouth open and hand on her heart. It is one of the great photographs that I have missed.
Anyhow the image of those parrots is frozen in my memory and my reaction is to associate them with Venezuela.
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