I'm interested in your opinions about placing humans in your architecture renders because it's a permanent battle between me and my employer. Every single project we're arguing. In my opinion, I always end up hurting my final rendering because I have to fill it with dozens of people who all do different things, the given reason being that "the place looks much more alive" if it's full of people. I strongly disagree. To me, it creates a surreal crowd, it's almost if everything that happens in this place over a whole year happens all at once in one specific moment. I think less is more, and I think interior renderings of small spaces don't need humans at all, ever. Another argument that I hear very often is that people in renderings convey "mood" and "emotion" - I also disagree, because I think the architecture and my choice of camera angle is supposed to deliver feelings. If the place looks dead without people, that won't change by adding dozens of friendly neighbours and kids playing. It's just kind of misleading. I think it doesn't matter how crowded the particular place would be in reality, like a school or something, since I want to show the architecture and the area, not the people who might end up there.
What's your take on this topic?
Second question: do you use 3d-modeled humans or do you add 2d-cutouts in post editing?(IF you use them) How do you decide? At the moment, I'm doing kind of both. I figured that 3D-humans can't be too close to the camera or in focus because they look uncanny. They're better for making crowds in the background or for single pedestrians. And they're great for faking reflections. But if they're in focus or very visible, I'd rather use photographic cutouts.
What's your take on this topic?
Second question: do you use 3d-modeled humans or do you add 2d-cutouts in post editing?(IF you use them) How do you decide? At the moment, I'm doing kind of both. I figured that 3D-humans can't be too close to the camera or in focus because they look uncanny. They're better for making crowds in the background or for single pedestrians. And they're great for faking reflections. But if they're in focus or very visible, I'd rather use photographic cutouts.
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