Is this a challenge ?
0oseven
Posts: 626
You may have already come across this but I think it is about the most photo realistic render I've seen. Created in Daz Studio and Iray
.An inspiration and challenge to match it in Carrara perhaps ?
This image is in the Galleries https://www.daz3d.com/gallery/#images/568681/ where you can blow it up
Post edited by 0oseven on
Comments
It does look very good. Iray is a very good renderer and with the right content you can get some great results - and as content is made for Daz Studio / Iray, you don't need to continuously adjust shaders that you have to do in Carrara.
It's a really amazing render, but I think the bar for realism is set much higher than that.
I wouldn't normally critique a gallery image this strongly (I do think this is a great image and if I commented on it that's probably about all I'd say, plus maybe pointing out something specific I like about it) but since it was brought up here specifically as an example of realism, with apologies to the original artist if they should happen to see this...
The hair looks very 3D to me, especially around the back of the neck where you can see the transparencies on the various hair planes interacting. That super strong DOF effect really kills it for me too. It looks great, but you rarely see photographs or movie stills that push it that far when the focus is a person. We in the 3D hobby world are fond of our DOF, `cause it's cool, but we use it much more liberally than professional photographers seem to (you can easily find counter-examples, but I mean in general). This was pointed out to me a few years ago by a friend who teaches photography at the university level and I can't stop noticing it now.
I can't point to one off-hand, but I know there are much more realistic renders in the galleries here.
I can sign under each letter MDO, and I want to add that the composition is far from perfect. According to the laws of the composition, more space should be left on the side where the model looks.
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noise can set mood and then I recommend using some anologue filter to really amp this up - a fake ISO1000+ with IRay is so damn easy
very observant - the model looks like she has a little proptosis - I'd go for kerataconus but the corneal apex should drroop with gravity.
Her iris is too far forward.
they haven't done too bad a job with the sclerotic scatter - perhaps been too enthusisatic as it should be more subtle etc
that said much better than I could do
edit also you could be really picky and say her earl lobes arnt being stretched neough with that earing :)
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You've done an excellent job with that tea shader - it looks good enough to drink.
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Stunning shaders on both mug and tea, Selina. I think, any HDRI and setting soft shadows would make the picture looking more realistic.
Great work as others have said. The thing for me that detracts from the realism is the surface the cup and saucer are on, that looks rather CGI, but the cup and the liquid themselves look terrific.
I'm with @0oseven on this one... I had to stop and look this for a full minute when it came out, and still wasn't certain it wasn't partially real/composited. I also appreciate that the composition doesn't follow the tried/true rules, but I think it works better because of it, and I can't articulate why. It just works for me. Not sure if Selina's eye observation and the earring weight will bother me from now on :^) It's still a great story-telling image. I want to know more...
Selina, your liquid in the tea is amazing, esp. the edge of the liquid against the cup. wow!
--ms
Wierd, realism be seen through the camera, not from the human eye :)
Did you know that all interpretations of background and lights overexposed are because cameras don't read fast as human eye? What is the true of realism here, backgrounds overexposed or as human eye see nothing is burning?
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That's a noticable improvement from an already good srtaing point!
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Your image was drastically improved, Selina. As for soft shadows, it's a matter of taste.
Here is several examples of a pan that I modeled and textured in Carrara. The first one is out of the box, with default distant light casting dull and hard shadows. The next images are with “enable soft shadows” checkbox on and with different hdri as background.
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Hi Selina! Thanks for the nice comment. I have little interest in culinary traditions. I am guided by personal preferences in cooking. When I was cooking those mushrooms, my goal was to get some nice pictures. I don't remember eating that dish.
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@Selina and @Vyusur - fanastic modeling, texturing, lighting, and rendering. Now I'm really hungry and want some tea. Thanks for drawing attention to where the tea touches the ceramic cup. That is great.
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A lot critiscism on the tech side all justified because as a rendered 3d image it might not be perfect but as 'mindsong' said - he had to look twice.
The point is most people do not put a picture under the same scrutiny as an artist when the look at it - Its just an image they see -, they like or dislike it or think it is a real photo or not - not spemding a lot of time looking for imperfections. So from that viewpoint I thought the picture was VERY realistic as I had to look more than twice. WE of course have the advantage over average joe because we start out knowing its 3d art.
With that in mind came the question - Is this a challenge ? Can such work be created in Carrara ? Salena is well on the way to showing it can though human is always harder to make realistic. I see dozens of wonderful renders but somehow I just know they are not real people.
All this from a layman ha ha !
Ted, thanks a lot!
This struck me, especially the word 'advantage'... I wonder that I've lost the 'magic', when I now scrutinize renders rather than just enjoy them. That said, perhaps the magic is simply moved to a higher level, where we are equally impressed with true mastery now (e.g. the initial thread render, selina's tea, anything by howie farks, alphatango, philw, etc., many of the NPR works). The magic is still there as I browse these days, but it has certainly changed as my standards of appreciation rise, and my ability to meet my own demands continues to perpetually slide just out of reach, heh.
But part of the appeal of Carrara is that it affordably allows the discriminating layman to achieve results that equal anything being produced anywhere, albiet often with some additional hoop jumps, creative hacks, and fenric's/philemo's tools :)
cheers,
--ms