craigbennett Posted April 29, 2016 Share Posted April 29, 2016 (edited) Hi Does anyone have any tips in what settings to use for such a large scene? Its an exterior, I have had test renders and it looks good, but the A0 version is taking forever to render even at a render farm. Im thinking my Image sampler Adaptive DMC settings might be too high 2/5 and irradiance map -3/-6 (are these the wrong way round). Any suggestions? Should I save out the Irradiance map and Light cache, or do you think a renderfarm should be able to cope? I have attached the settings. Thanks Edited April 29, 2016 by craigbennett More information Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris MacDonald Posted April 29, 2016 Share Posted April 29, 2016 How closely is this going to be viewed? That's the main question. http://isthisretina.com/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
craigbennett Posted April 29, 2016 Author Share Posted April 29, 2016 Probably 1- 3 metres It will be on a pedestrian foot path on a hoarding fence Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
craigbennett Posted April 29, 2016 Author Share Posted April 29, 2016 Im presuming I do not have to render at A0 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chris MacDonald Posted April 29, 2016 Share Posted April 29, 2016 Well A0 is the size of the hoarding, but what DPI you need to render out at will determine the size of your render. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
craigbennett Posted April 30, 2016 Author Share Posted April 30, 2016 Nobody seems to understand my question. What improvements can I make to the vray settings to speed up the render process, baring in mind that this will be printed at A0. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nicolai Bongard Posted April 30, 2016 Share Posted April 30, 2016 The settings that are optimal usually correspond to what kind of geometry you have in your scene and their materials, so it is hard to say. However, the "14k x something large" resolution you are trying to render out is completely bananas. What people here are suggesting, is that instead of spending a lot of time tuning your settings to something that may work slightly better, you should just decrease your resolution to speed it up. Since your image is supposed to be printed on A0, people will not view it from 30cm but rather 3 meters or something like that. The density of pixels will not need to be so high when viewed from 3 meters. Thus you can get away with a lower resolution render, and it will still look good when viewed from the intended distance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
craigbennett Posted April 30, 2016 Author Share Posted April 30, 2016 Yes I appreciate that I think there is something corrupt with my model also I will render the scene at 5149 x 3651. This should equate to A0 at 110dpi. I've read somewhere that this is exceptable for advertsing hoardings. Ideally though I would have liked to have rendered at 7022 x 4967 (A0 at 150 dpi) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scott Schroeder Posted April 30, 2016 Share Posted April 30, 2016 We render out these at 3500 pixels and it looks fine. If they print this stuff on cheap ass vinyl so it stands up to the weather, that is usually something around 25-50 dpi or less from a commercial print shop. At least that is the case from our print shop. We do this in the cheapest possible configuration as these things can get beat all the hell, especially if they are at ground level. Then you have some punk kid tagging your render with spray paint...... Talk to the print shop. Why guess when you can ask the source that will be printing it? A 5 minute conversation with the printer will save days of guesswork. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now