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By Richard
#230015
A quick model render for a friend over the pond!

I had a bit of fun doing this one!

ImageImageImage
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By ivox3
#230027
Simple and sweet Richard. ;) Careful though, ...you might addict your buddy. :)
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By def4d
#230073
Quick but very nice!
I like the spots behind the plastic glass, would you explain for their setup?
By rusteberg
#230114
Nice!!!

where did you aqcuire the scalies? they really do make the scene.
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By Richard
#230314
Thanks guys!!!!!

Yes it was fun to do something so simple! The model was delivered with the sail single skinned and pretty much lacking any detail as it is very preliminary in planning.

So I gave each panel of the sail thickness and utilised the plexiglass MXM off the gallery and presented the model this way to avoid a great deal of assumptions on my part to present it any more true to form.

The lights to the sail were added in one minute of PS postwork using the materialID to mask and then in PS Filter>Render>lights (I cheated in other words, sorry!).

The model was exported to studio from SketchUp for setup. The peeps are some Alan Frasers free samples from the SketchUp forums (now FormFonts) but mostly those collected from the SketchUp forums and those shipped with SU. All were just made neutral colour and then made plastic via MXM. In other words I just collected any and every 3D figure I had and shoved them in.

The whole scene was reduced to a scale of 1:50 to visualise better the built model aspect. I must say I do a high percentage of my presentations this way to avoid the extreme need to replicate materials to realism and also to avoid the generally hard to achieve areas where the building touches the ground, trees, plants, roadways etc.

Just to demonstrate here are two of my own designs that I presented this way. These were both done pre Maxwell days, both rendered with artlantis. The beauty about this method again is even the lack of detail required to the model in general.

ImageImage
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By Jake256
#230328
I really like that first one Richard. The people are cool too. Nice.
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By Richard
#230330
Jake256 wrote:I really like that first one Richard. The people are cool too. Nice.
Hey here's another mate!!! How are you Jake??? Good to see you and that hairdo still around!
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By Richard
#230342
hclbaumbach wrote:Thanks, Richard.

As an architect myself I find "model-scale" renderings more valuable in practice. People intuitively sense it's a model and move on to discussion about the ideas, rather than nit-pick over irrelevant details.

And, in the real world, where you have to get paid for your time, a hyper-real image is worthless (for most projects) if it takes three weeks to assemble.

I'm curious, how many hours do you have in the images in the first post?

Maxwell sure does take it to the next level, don't it?

Good work.

Chris
Chris

There was about two hours remodeling, one - two in setup and three hours rendering. Though I spent about another hour setting up for the other images and another three hours rendering and another hour PS edit!
By siliconbauhaus
#230475
Nice stuff Richard, I never thought about scaling a model down.
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By def4d
#230783
so lights are composited?! wow, would never have imagine that!

Thx for the idea, though i'm not sure how you did!
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