Small patio house: updated
-
All model elements from the warehouse. Kitchen was grafted to the living room, patio enlarged, foliage changed, and 90% of the furniture added. Some textures modified as well.
-
Beautiful work as always.
-
Really nice! Your doing putting out some good ones! But I can't see the photographer in the mirror.
-
Thanks Dave. Thanks pbacot.
You can't see the photographer because special FX.
-
opps double post
-
Very nice job !
-
Thanks tuna! Updates are in the works. The light color isn't working for me. The new renders look far better.
-
Looking good so far
-
Thanks loco!
Here are the updates. Changed the global lighting tint/temp/color. It was previously too yellow.
-
Me like
-
Thanks ntxdave!
-
How do you come up with stuff like this? Honestly, where do you come up with all of the small items that make the model look so realistic?
-
@ntxdave said:
How do you come up with stuff like this? Honestly, where do you come up with all of the small items that make the model look so realistic?
It's all from the 3D Warehouse.
I would add more, but I'm at the limit of my laptop.
Basically I just look at my house, other interior designs, other renders and then add items, and then I spend hours fiddling with the textures in Raylectron. Often having to "fix" the imported models as well
These renders take me days to set up. Mostly because my laptop is slow. It's why my first renders always look a little "meh."
I also to use to work in professional film and TV, so making sets look good (lighting, decor, shot angles) is part of my professional experience. It's also why I am always open to suggestions to make my renders better. I'm used to working with teams. Now that I understand my render program better, I'm able to make better renders by drawing on my personal experience. But this is nothing compared to what I could do.
To my eyes, there is sooo much missing from these renders. Like I just noticed there was no shine on the white counter top. Oops. Now I have to start the render over.
-
A night shot.
-
Nice, on a roll mate.
-
@bryan k said:
I also to use to work in professional film and TV, so making sets look good (lighting, decor, shot angles) is part of my professional experience.
You and Solo!
Since all I have done was the car wash stuff (which I have not done for a god while now), I do not have the βinsightβ guys like you have, now just come to the forum (and a couple others) and enjoy the work people like you post.
-
@ntxdave said:
@bryan k said:
I also to use to work in professional film and TV, so making sets look good (lighting, decor, shot angles) is part of my professional experience.
You and Solo!
Since all I have done was the car wash stuff (which I have not done for a god while now), I do not have the βinsightβ guys like you have, now just come to the forum (and a couple others) and enjoy the work people like you post.
Like I've said, all it takes is practice.
Did you see my post of the before and after, bedroom renders? It's taken me years to learn how to use the render programs and understand the jargon and how and why render programs work. Other people learn faster than me.
I still don't think I'm all that good. Especially when I see other member's works. But I keep practicing. Because that's really all it takes.
Grab some sample room scenes from the warehouse and bash it up. You can do this too!
-
Thanks Mike!
Looking forward to you posting more as well.
-
Two more.
Advertisement