advanced rendering for AutoCAD
I have this(bedroom view 11) clients wants this (photo 6) model (plan - copy) attached. help needed with materials and lighting, on wall, furniture and floor.
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Looks pretty close to me.
Try using path tracer, it may give that slightly softer look.
I like this one very much... nice atmosphere indeed...and I thought by the look of it that this is path tracer...
Very difficult for the path tracer to resolve this one, though. I need more cores (32?)
Just change the design of the building and have more windows.
You got it.
Do other rendering engines have this problem with dimly lit interiors, or are there ways round it?
Sort of-- our standard engine handles this one pretty nicely. This one would give Maxwell fits (I think.)
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It's not really the dim lighting, that part's easy. The predominant light in this space is reflected sky light through a small opening. That's a very difficult problem. The light source is large (the sky) yet the opening is small. The noise in this one is compounded by a variety of other issues:
would it not be good to try to reduce the number of faces first? On the account what I do see on the image, the number of faces seems too high to me.
The same with "some degree of glossiness" - some parts of the model do not seem to need to be glossy at all...
The rendering is nice and interesting, so I would like to see it happen and I would also like to know that it is possible to achieve this kind of quality using nXt on regular basis..
Nice job, akino and others.
I wouldn't-- the number of faces is probably the least of our worries here. You only reduce glossiness if you don't want glossy walls-- otherwise you have to leave it. The best thing to do, as Peter suggested, is to bust a few more holes in the walls. An extra window or two would make the thing go much faster. Pulling back the curtains would probably help-- but they're my favorite part.
Welcome to path tracing. It kind of is what it is. 180 core hrs. gets you this.
Must say I love the over night thing and when next I run into this I will be sure to add openings where it will not show in the view am rendering to help the rendering along. Thanks all I must say I have learnt a lot.
Adding openings wasn't really meant as a serious suggestion, of course. It just demonstrates the difficulties of rendering a daylit space with a small opening for the light. While Path Tracing should eventually get you an answer, it can take forever if you give it a hard enough problem.