This is a nice house. I am not sure of the purpose of the rendering, which was odd. Initially, it was the real estate agent, who wanted a pretty picture to market with, then it was the architect, who wanted every single detail to be there, but feeding me parts and pieces when available and when it didn't really matter. Eventually, I think the architect passed things off to the draftsmen and things started to get very technical. All the views requested ended up being isometrics, 45 feet off the ground on each corner. I ended up halting everything and going back to my client, who seems to have been caught in the middle, asking her what the images are for. She said the architect wants to work out the design with his client and I quickly told her that wasn't what I was commissioned for and I would have to charge per hour for anything that wasn't on the initially submitted documents. I have learned to nip that in the bottom really fast. What happens is, someone hires me and doesn't read the contract or passed things on to someone else who didn't see the contract. Some think they hire me to create an image, period, and it doesn't matter how many changes happen. I recently had to tell a client that I don't work until they say I am done, that is slavery, and we abolished that awhile ago.
Anyway, once I nipped it, things moved fast. I think the house is a design in progress and will change, but the agent will use these to market the property. It happens often, they want to market way before the design is done, which seems to be their problem and they can't make it mine.
Anyway, once I nipped it, things moved fast. I think the house is a design in progress and will change, but the agent will use these to market the property. It happens often, they want to market way before the design is done, which seems to be their problem and they can't make it mine.
Comment