- Sat Dec 04, 2010 7:11 pm
#333848
Over the last few years I've been putting more time and effort (and $) into bringing 3D modeling (Rhino) and rendering (MR) into my architectural design workflow. Although the clients value the multiple "clay" 3D images in the conceptual design phase, I've received very lackluster responses from them as well as other design professionals when I show either WIP or completed Maxwell Render images that I'm quite enthusiastic about. The prevailing attitude seems to be that they would rather see a hand-generated render, even if much poorer quality, than a well done photoreal image. I saw this also in Rusteberg's thread in the WIP of the Church Project where the client wrote "It would be nice if photo realism could be toned down some for softer water color effect".
This frankly has me quite disconcerted. So far I've only shown the clients standard USA letter size (8 1/2" x 11") images on photo paper. I don't know if my locale is a factor (mid/south USA), or if it's the clientele (traditional custom residential), or if it's a fairly universal reluctance to accept computer generated photo realistic images even if done very well.
What kind of responses are you all getting (probably would apply to architectural type projects)?
Joe
This frankly has me quite disconcerted. So far I've only shown the clients standard USA letter size (8 1/2" x 11") images on photo paper. I don't know if my locale is a factor (mid/south USA), or if it's the clientele (traditional custom residential), or if it's a fairly universal reluctance to accept computer generated photo realistic images even if done very well.
What kind of responses are you all getting (probably would apply to architectural type projects)?
Joe
MW 2.6, C4D R12/R13, Rhino 5.0, WinVista x64, i7-920 3.8Ghz, 12 GB RAM