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    Piano Room

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    • soloS Offline
      solo
      last edited by

      Composition is key in any image, be it a photo or a render.

      Here is a handy tip:

      http://www.solos-art.com

      If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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      • pbacotP Offline
        pbacot
        last edited by

        Twilight has a tool built-in just for trying out the thirds in a scene and setting up the camera.

        MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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        • soloS Offline
          solo
          last edited by

          @pbacot said:

          Twilight has a tool built-in just for trying out the thirds in a scene and setting up the camera.

          Thea for SU also has it available

          http://www.solos-art.com

          If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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          • ntxdaveN Offline
            ntxdave
            last edited by

            Thanks for sharing the video Pete. Some good advice.

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            • Mike AmosM Offline
              Mike Amos
              last edited by

              Even if the cameraman did use different parts of the windmill to align in each part of the video.

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              • Mike AmosM Offline
                Mike Amos
                last edited by

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                3D Conceptual Visualization Process & Techniques in NY, NY by Pixate Creative

                Let Pixate Creative take you through our 3D Conceptual Visualization Process & Techniques for our rendering projects. From AutoCAD Files to Textures and Lighting we include details of our process. Serving NY, NY. Click to learn more!

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                • pilouP Offline
                  pilou
                  last edited by

                  Purely academic and subjective! πŸ˜„
                  More barrier for one, more grass for the other! πŸ’š
                  Not sure that the first is more dynamic!
                  All tastes are in nature! πŸ˜„
                  subjective.jpg

                  Frenchy Pilou
                  Is beautiful that please without concept!
                  My Little site :)

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                  • G Offline
                    garystan
                    last edited by

                    Hey guys :

                                    I watched the video. It has some good pointers.  I  cropped the rendering with the "positioning" mentioned in the video.   I hope this looks better.
                    
                                                                                   garystan
                    

                    Piano Room v 5.jpg

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                    • G Offline
                      garystan
                      last edited by

                      Hey guys :

                                      Hope I'm making any  sketchucation mistakes.  I just wanted to let you guys know that I watched the video.  Some good  ideas there. So I kinda adjusted the  Piano Room....thinking about the postioning.   Hopefully, this is an improvement.
                      
                                                                                         garystan
                      

                      Piano Room v 5.jpg

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                      • tuna1957T Offline
                        tuna1957
                        last edited by

                        garystan, the scale of the piano is still bothering me. did a quickie search. The measurement from the floor to the bottom of the piano "case" is approximately 28 1/2" ( where your knees go when playing ), from floor to the top of the "lid is 40".your bookcase/credenza seems to dwarf the piano in size. most low bookcases and credenza's are usually 28" - 30" high on average. the next thing is just personal preference. I'd move the camera position to the right where you would have a more raking view of the wall with the bookcase. I'd rotate the piano a little clockwise so your not looking so straight on at it. It would also bring more of the sofa into view. All that said" by george your standing at the plate swinging at the pitches". Keep it up it's how you learn and get better. πŸ‘

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                        • pbacotP Offline
                          pbacot
                          last edited by

                          As far as scale goes, since you asked. I am just imagining someone sitting on that couch and the on the piano seat. Someone who would sit on that seat might have their legs dangling at the couch.

                          How wide is the piano? how long is your guitar?

                          MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                          • G Offline
                            garystan
                            last edited by

                            @tuna1957 said:

                            garystan, the scale of the piano is still bothering me. did a quickie search. The measurement from the floor to the bottom of the piano "case" is approximately 28 1/2" ( where your knees go when playing ), from floor to the top of the "lid is 40".your bookcase/credenza seems to dwarf the piano in size. most low bookcases and credenza's are usually 28" - 30" high on average. the next thing is just personal preference. I'd move the camera position to the right where you would have a more raking view of the wall with the bookcase. I'd rotate the piano a little clockwise so your not looking so straight on at it. It would also bring more of the sofa into view. All that said" by george your standing at the plate swinging at the pitches". Keep it up it's how you learn and get better. πŸ‘
                            quote="tuna1957"]garystan, the scale of the piano is still bothering me. did a quickie search. The measurement from the floor to the bottom of the piano "case" is approximately 28 1/2" ( where your knees go when playing ), from floor to the top of the "lid is 40".your bookcase/credenza seems to dwarf the piano in size. most low bookcases and credenza's are usually 28" - 30" high on average. the next thing is just personal preference. I'd move the camera position to the right where you would have a more raking view of the wall with the bookcase. I'd rotate the piano a little clockwise so your not looking so straight on at it. It would also bring more of the sofa into view. All that said" by george your standing at the plate swinging at the pitches". Keep it up it's how you learn and get better. πŸ‘
                            @tuna1957 said:

                            garystan, the scale of the piano is still bothering me. did a quickie search. The measurement from the floor to the bottom of the piano "case" is approximately 28 1/2" ( where your knees go when playing ), from floor to the top of the "lid is 40".your bookcase/credenza seems to dwarf the piano in size. most low bookcases and credenza's are usually 28" - 30" high on average. the next thing is just personal preference. I'd move the camera position to the right where you would have a more raking view of the wall with the bookcase. I'd rotate the piano a little clockwise so your not looking so straight on at it. It would also bring more of the sofa into view. All that said" by george your standing at the plate swinging at the pitches". Keep it up it's how you learn and get better. πŸ‘
                            /quote

                                    tuna1957 :
                            
                                               I did some re-arranging.  Resizing the furniture.  Adjusting the view......etc............. Hopefully, this looks better.
                                                                                            garystan
                            

                            Piano Room Small.jpg

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                            • G Offline
                              garystan
                              last edited by

                              @solo said:

                              Composition is key in any image, be it a photo or a render.

                              Here is a handy tip:

                              solo :
                              I did a little work on it. Re-arranging the furniture.....point of view...scale...etc. Hopefully, this looks better. (And, keeping the 2/3 rule in mind).

                                                                                                garystan
                              

                              Piano Room Small.jpg

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                              • tuna1957T Offline
                                tuna1957
                                last edited by

                                ditto what pbacot said. a few comments, the corner of the windows still catches my eye first, then I go to the various objects in the room. Pick the object that you want to be the focal point and adjust your view so that is what the eye is drawn to first. I'd increase the field of view some so you have more of the left side of the scene in view. I'd try lowering the eye height a little maybe. It just take trying different angles and such until you hit that sweet spot. Keep experimenting .... πŸ‘

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                                • G Offline
                                  garystan
                                  last edited by

                                  @pbacot said:

                                  Good work! Feeling much better with piano etc. The exterior picture is the wrong perspective for the room. You'd want the horizon lower and the vanishing points sort of going along with the window grid.

                                  pbacot :

                                              I wasn't sure about where to set the horizon.  I didn't want to give the impression that the room was high up.  As for the pic itself.......I wasn't sure about that either.   Thanks for your comments (advice).
                                                                                                  garystan
                                  
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                                  • G Offline
                                    garystan
                                    last edited by

                                    @tuna1957 said:

                                    ditto what pbacot said. a few comments, the corner of the windows still catches my eye first, then I go to the various objects in the room. Pick the object that you want to be the focal point and adjust your view so that is what the eye is drawn to first. I'd increase the field of view some so you have more of the left side of the scene in view. I'd try lowering the eye height a little maybe. It just take trying different angles and such until you hit that sweet spot. Keep experimenting .... πŸ‘

                                          tuna1957 :
                                    
                                                      Taking a closer (and second) look at it.  Yeah.....I think you're right about the perpsecive of the background.  I take it......this part of the learning process.....
                                    
                                                                                                         garystan
                                    
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                                    • pbacotP Offline
                                      pbacot
                                      last edited by

                                      @garystan said:

                                      @pbacot said:

                                      Good work! Feeling much better with piano etc. The exterior picture is the wrong perspective for the room. You'd want the horizon lower and the vanishing points sort of going along with the window grid.

                                      pbacot :

                                                  I wasn't sure about where to set the horizon.  I didn't want to give the impression that the room was high up.  As for the pic itself.......I wasn't sure about that either.   Thanks for your comments (advice).
                                                                                                      garystan
                                      

                                      If you look at the window sill and the horizontal muntins, the lines converge in the area of the lower panes, so the eye level of the viewer is somewhere in the lower pane, and the horizon would be there, not in the upper pane.

                                      WOOPS I edited the wrong post. The picture should go here.


                                      Screen Shot 2016-07-07 at 12.23.29 PM.png

                                      MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                                      • pbacotP Offline
                                        pbacot
                                        last edited by

                                        Good work! Feeling much better with piano etc. The exterior picture is the wrong perspective for the room. You'd want the horizon lower and the vanishing points sort of going along with the window grid.

                                        MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                                        • tuna1957T Offline
                                          tuna1957
                                          last edited by

                                          garystan, just want to reinforce I'm in no way knocking your efforts. By gosh your trying and asking questions and that's how you get better. Was a little bored last night so threw together an example model to try and better express some of the things I was saying. Have no idea the exact dimensions of your room so just sort of tried to get reasonably close. Just put representations of the 3 main elements. Killed the color as it was a little distracting from what I was trying to show. The piano is a concert grand and very close to real world dimensions. Lowered eye height and set F.O.V.to 45 degrees. My point is don't be afraid to experiment ... keep up your efforts πŸ‘


                                          piano room.jpg

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                                          • jo-keJ Offline
                                            jo-ke
                                            last edited by

                                            Horizont of outside exterior is always tricky.

                                            I usually set a 360Β° pano as background, so I don't have to worry about the horizont. It always matches. wherever your viewpoint is.

                                            Here's an example (Have a look at exterior):

                                            http://www.zz7.de

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