Posts Tagged ‘archviz’

Chelsea Square Dusk

A project from earlier this year that I reworked a bit. Added some more props and lighting and other things I didn’t get time to do previously. The photos are some of my favourite ones from my Dad’s portfolio, and winter themed as the first snow has just started to fall here in Sweden.

As usual, the renders are more or less as they were directly from vray, just added some glows to the lights.

Chelsea Square Day

Chelsea Square kitchen crop

A new project in my vizualisation gallery: Chelsea Square by Wilkinson King Architects. These images were for marketing purposes and were lots of fun to work on. The building was modeled in Sketchup and all textures were made from scratch from photographs. As usual with my projects, there wasn’t much post work in photoshop (apart from the cross section).

The caustics in the pool were calculated with all the glass hidden, saved and then the glass was turned back on for the final render. The actual water surface was modeled by dropping a ball into some reactor water, totally over the top I know!

Chelsea Square water crop

I wanted the brick texture to match the existing building as closely as possible so I took photos of the end gable brick (in the shade) and then painted over every brick in photoshop. This was so that the displacement map worked correctly in displacing the bricks outwards while recessing the grout slightly, and also helped in the reflection map to make the grout less reflective. The traced bricks layer was used as a mask to lighten a greyscale copy of the diffuse layer. Painting over bricks in photoshop is as about as boring as it gets, but worth the effort.

texture

Chelsea Square stair view crop

vrayRT for Architectural Visualisation

Very impressed with vrayRT so far, looks like it will be really useful for a lot of my work.

Here’s a 10min (longer than intended!) demonstration on vimeo (no sound). VrayRT is using my macpro (2.8 octo) and a slave i7 920.

VrayRT (Realtime) from Peter Guthrie on Vimeo.

Click through to vimeo for the HD version