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Great work! I like it, did you add the plant i the foreground afterwards or did you use depth of field. How much is added afterwards. What kind of lightning did you use? I like the shadows on the house and the "bouncy colors"...
Fluke73<br />==============================<br />www.flukeworld.com - private (has gallery)<br />www.webzoo.se - my company
first of all i like to thank david for his vsoft... the entourage is all pshop
its all davids visoft and a little brightness contrast in ps
only gi skylight... i dont know much of the setting i hope i answer your question???... anyway thanks for the comment.its nice to hear nice word from a master... thanks
Thanks for your thanks - its all about us learning together and helping each other.
I think your ps work really makes the model come alive and it looks really good, particulary the second one, where it is hard to distinguish between the model and the ps work - very nice. Maybe it now needs a bit of background (mountains, trees etc) just to prevent the sky meeting the earth so abrubtly, unless it is on the coast!
thanks for your comment guys ...david as you can see in my first image the sun shade is strong i cant tone it down how will i decrease the sunrays??? i am really a beginner on exteriors needs a lot of practice to make something like yours and fluke.. thanks also for all the help and comments its all appreciated...
I know that you can reduce the suns intensity by reducing the 'intensity multiplier' from 1 to say .5 in the environment menu. However, I suspect that will just make the whole scene darker. I think it may be the white render which has such a high contrast with, for instance, the shadows inside the building. I'm not sure, but I suspect it is something that can be fixed by reducing the contrast in ps. I nearly always make adjustments like this in post processing, e.g. colour balance, contrast, brightness and sharpness etc. until it looks right (or in my case matches the photomatch image!)
It never occured to me that this wasn't with the physical camera - isn't it funny how you sometimes miss the obvious! Yes, physical camera essential for scenes like this.
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