Results 1 to 9 of 9

Thread: rendering elevation views

  1. #1
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2008-05
    Location
    Honolulu
    Posts
    334
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Talking rendering elevation views

    how do you set up a view so that it is an orthographic elevation
    so that you can render it...

    rendered elevations views look really great on a set of plans.
    r

  2. #2
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2003-10
    Location
    Santa Barbara
    Posts
    397
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    View, Orient, North south etc

    only problem is that skys dont render in ortho views
    but you can drop in a sky in a photoshop background layer

  3. #3
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2008-05
    Location
    Honolulu
    Posts
    334
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    ok, that worked

    I think you could huge wall behind the building and assign a sky image to it if needed
    haven't tried tho....

    personally, want to really want to do the renderings in 3dsmax...

    r

  4. #4
    All AUGI, all the time
    Join Date
    2005-12
    Posts
    566
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    Yeah, Max is better.

  5. #5
    "Rock-n-Roll Architect" SCShell's Avatar
    Join Date
    2004-01
    Location
    Tucson, AZ
    Posts
    1,272
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    Hey there,
    Even easier.....save your rendered elevation as a PNG file. Then open a drafting view in Revit, import you favorite sky or background photo, then import your rendered PNG file. Play with them a bit to adjust and Voila! Just export it out as a JPG or PNG using Masking Regions to get rid of overhanging sky backgrounds etc.
    Good Luck
    Steve
    Photoshop not required.

  6. #6
    Early Adopter sbrown's Avatar
    Join Date
    2003-05
    Location
    Coast to Coast
    Posts
    4,440
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    Heres and example we did in revit. The - revit is without any background work, the -reduced is with the background work.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Scott D. Brown, AIA
    Senior Project Manager | Associate

    BECK

  7. #7
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2003-10
    Location
    Santa Barbara
    Posts
    397
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    One advantage to photoshop is you can apply filters
    this one has a watercolor filter to soften it up a bit
    Attached Images Attached Images

  8. #8
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2008-05
    Location
    Honolulu
    Posts
    334
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Talking Re: rendering elevation views

    wow nice renderings

    just curious how did you do the spanish tile
    it looks like it is modeled not just an image

    r

  9. #9
    I could stop if I wanted to
    Join Date
    2003-10
    Location
    Santa Barbara
    Posts
    397
    Login to Give a bone
    0

    Default Re: rendering elevation views

    yes they are modelled w/ line line based tile family, its the only way to get a decent look, slows the model down like crazy but you can always turn them off

Similar Threads

  1. Rendering Internal Views
    By Anfield in forum Revit - Tutorials
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 2007-03-01, 05:11 PM
  2. Elevation Views - Is rendering possible?
    By sfraney in forum Revit Architecture - General
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 2006-06-29, 09:12 PM
  3. Rendering an Elevation...
    By twiceroadsfool in forum Revit Architecture - General
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 2006-01-27, 12:30 PM
  4. Replies: 4
    Last Post: 2005-10-18, 12:58 PM
  5. Elevation Rendering
    By cphubb in forum Revit - Rendering
    Replies: 9
    Last Post: 2004-06-04, 08:43 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •