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heni30

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heni30 last won the day on November 14 2021

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  1. The handle disk cover sheen makes it look like lacquer/ highly reflective plastic.
  2. Hey Chog, Architectural photographers will take 2 different images - one exposed for overall lighting and another exposed for overly bright areas . Then composite them in Photoshop. It's almost impossible to do an image with 2 extreme lifgt conditions with 1 exposure. Your wall light scallops are too distractingly bright. The left wall shelves being bare and empty really affects the image in a negative way. Table could use some more objects carefully chosen. Cross lights look too low, like you might bump into them. Dining table is too bright. And look at pictures, pictures and more pictures.
  3. Like I said, nice lighting and ambience, but if things don't seem right with the design, people will be distracted which will take away from appreciation of the rendering.
  4. I think it looks good. I like the glow effect. A couple of things - The sink should be with the mirror like for shaving or brushing teeth, etc. Mirror looks small. The towels seam a little hairy. The folded towels are too rigid - makes them seem like cardboard. There's usually a light source above the mirror - like a fluorescent tube or sconce. The design elements look incongruous with such a small cramped space ( that kind of countertop sink, the marble counter top) Tile scale is too big. But the light is spot on.
  5. Hey Bruna, I feel your work is technically right on but tight visually and consequently somewhat sterile. It's very unproductive to endlessly try to self-criticize your work. I find the best approach is to try to emulate work (or pics) that you find exciting. Reproduce some images by Dbox or Mir verbatim and you will be forced to see what techniques they are employing that might be lacking in your own work. I think some of your images could use more accessories, things arranged in a less rigid manner, lighting with a touch of randomness. I don't trust myself to "make my images better" on my own. Copying (other work and photos) is best teacher.
  6. Looks good. Maybe needs a bigger tummy.
  7. It will take you several moons to pick up Max and Vray again to where you feel comfortable and are efficient. Would strongly suggest collaborating with someone.
  8. If the entry height is 4750 - using feet it's either 4.7 feet high of 47 feet high - so it must be meters. (mm)
  9. 1. too much sun on left wall - robe and cosmetics are bleached out 2. night stand is too saturated 3. looks good 4. i find the dark stools depressing 5. this one is right on 6. outdoor furniture is fading away compared to interior 7. i think fore ground needs flowers / shrubs - car too white! 8. left wall seems dull compared to right - wall picture seems tentative - frame and image - boots too big for jacket size 9. crazy big bright image too distracting 10. needs foreground element - table edge? chair? 11. 2 items look arbitrary and isolated - hanging light would probably be off 12. right on 13. liquor wall way too contrasty / saturated
  10. My old boss always used to say he regretted not going with his backup plan - gynecology. However, being in south Florida, senior citizen center of the country, we knew he wasn't serious.
  11. Bali is nice and a great place to live if you don't mind tsunamis, typhoons, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions.
  12. I too am along in years. In my younger years I had the good fortune (misfortune?) of being brainwashed about the sanctity of art. I sowed my wild oats wildly right after architecture school (4 years backpacking in Europe, art school and 10 years doing photography, into guitar playing for a long time (12 Strats) getting my first archtecture related job when I was in my early 30s. So basically I took care of my bucket list in the beginning instead of at the end. The point being, in my case, that you focus on what's in front of you and just keep growing. So I will just keep doing this (could be anything - I like image making) as long as I can. It might be harder to do if your significant other is more traditional but luckily my wife is a painter so we're on the same wave length.
  13. Jonny, Just google warehouse roof windows or skylights. It can be anything you like depending on your structure and design intent. Do you want them heavy and substantial , light and airy, do you want a strong visual movement sideways or in perspective? The choice is yours. What you have looks ok.
  14. Hey, I think the first one is spot on. It really seems integrated with the environment. The second one you have the environment and the house is just plopped onto it. Especially because everything is so barren around the foundation wall. AND the sun angle is turning your glass white. Visually it may as well be white walls. And the side walls are now too dark - like the dark wood wall. It's like two examples of what to do and what not to do.
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