Podium V2 interior
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If two chairs and two apples, then loneliness could be more obvious.
Three chairs? three apples? We all are Stanley Kubrick's funs, aren't we?
This is a "strong" image. Well done.
It's the Ps work that I don't like much. A fake-volumetric effect could turn the scene to a more dramatical way. -
Who lives here ? Mystery is complete!
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beautiful stuff!
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Thanks, guys.
Michalis -de gustibus. Still, good idea.
@solo said:
I was instantly reminded of my days with Podium 1 and remember this being the best way to get soft shadows and good even lighting, however I wondered if this was the fastest way (I cannot remember) did or does LEM's come at a speed cost?
They did use to slow down rendering a lot, yes. But not anymore: nowadays the speed hit, if any, is negligible.
@solo said:
Does Podium 2 have HDRI support?
No. However, you can use the SU sky to light your scene -hence you can choose colors on the fly. Turn off SU shadows, and you've got nice soft lighting. Not quite the same thing, admittedly, but it's easy, and as you know that's what Podium is about.
@solo said:
I'm assuming the LEM behind the camera is to assist and give some light volume as without it all surfaces facing camera would be black, however I am wondering if there was a way of using ISO, shutter speed and f-number settings to enhance lighting without the need for the LEM?
No. No such settings. I would've added the fill light using any other renderer, though.
@solo said:
What my rambling is about is the setup of scene may actually be just as if not more important than the actual render settings.
The setup is important, obviously. Lighing can make or kill a render. The render preset I used did contribute to the quality of the image, though. More photons, better AA and more blur samples than the stock presets. I also rendered big (5000 x 2694) and then downsampled in Photoshop to further improve the AA. Which, given Podium's speed (36 mins for the 5000 x 2694 image), is a totally viable approach.
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Your last point is interesting and one I have heard and even used from time to time, render large and reduce in post editing.
Have you tested what the time would be to render correct size with higher settings (better AA, etc) in comparison? Just wondering if there is a speed advantage or a quality advantage doing it larger.
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@solo said:
Have you tested what the time would be to render correct size with higher settings (better AA, etc) in comparison? Just wondering if there is a speed advantage or a quality advantage doing it larger.
No, I haven't. AA settings are contained within Podium's render presets. I find it more convenient to render large and downsample than to open up the preset I'm using, edit it etc. Also, altering AA settings, test rendering, altering AA settings again ... can be quite time consuming, and it's a process I'm not always in the mood for.
The next version of Podium will give more control over AA via the UI, I believe. Per material AA, or something.
@unknownuser said:
(...) Patrick Nagel (...)
I had to look that one up. Ew.
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@kais said:
nice rendering but 53 mins. is too much
now in Lumion 2 you can do it less than 53 secYeah, but the quality won't be the slightest bit comparable. I can make an omelette in around 60 seconds, but I wouldn't like to eat it!
I've seen what Lumion does, I've seen what all the render engines can do. They all have their benefits and drawbacks. Lumion's main benefit is speed, its main drawback is quality. Yes, I'm pretty sure you'll disagree but you'll be wrong - certainly as far as Podium is concerned.
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@unknownuser said:
@unknownuser said:
(...) Patrick Nagel (...)
I had to look that one up. Ew.
Yeah .. .Pretty disgusting. that would turn your very elegant modernist expression into a cheesy bachelor pad. The only thing missing would be the hot tub and the gold medallions
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Patrick Nagel is 30 years too late, it may have worked in the 80's with your Chinese themed black and white shellacked room but today it's just cheesy.
Remember these 80's gems?
Looks like his rubbish
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The set up explanation was interesting and the light around the corner is the clever bit, so is there a key light behind the camera that sounds like a good idea anyway.
What is the QMC setting I know it's results take ages and it looks better but is there anymore tips on this, Thanks -
Tom,
I did not want to post here as this is a Podium thread, however I posted here: http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=81&t=43169&p=386208#p386208
Rendered the scene with Thea bsd, then knocked out the wall and threw in some glass bricks.
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Do the resulting renders from a white LEM, just outside the door, and a white sketchup background differ?
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Hm, I should do a comparison to find out.
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Thea version (TR1). Nothing too special.
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Rebuilt an Evermotion scene and rendered it with Podium. Needs plates and stuff.
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...you're on to something here! Very cool indeed.
Did you compare the results with LEM's outside openings VS. just a white SU background? -
Hm, no. Wouldn't be too different, I believe, from the second image, which is lit by Podium's physical sky. The main difference would be that you have less control over your lighting.
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you're really pushing podium to the next level here, stinkie..
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Thanks, Jason. There really isn't that much to it, though.
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