Hi guys, well it sounds like Corona is the place I should start. If things go well I could invest in a PC for 3D. As it happens Apple is releasing a new 28 core pro Mac with 2x the most powerful nvidia cards available, but it will probably cost £10k when new. The specs are silly, so it’s got to cost silly money. But whilst I don’t like pc’s I respect their value for 3D and am happy to use it just for that.
I’m not completely useless with 3D and I know how frustrating it was with 3dsmax when I couldn’t use a certain material because I’d used an incompatible light. This is why I’d like your advice and to stick to it, knowing exactly what I’m capable of rendering and not taking on work out of that scope. Plus I think I can afford the Carona 10 core node to learn with, that’s my 4 core iMac can use those 10 nodes.
An old workmate James McVittie is a partner of a multinational company (Visual-Method) they render interiors with V-ray, the example his guy did of one of our photo studio room sets was impeccable IMO, except for the lime in the fruit bowl nobody could tell the difference between the photo or render, it took him 7 days from start to finish but it was an amazing piece of work. But James said Vladimir’s(the 3D artist) value is that he is one of the few who can produce materials in v-ray, as the material sliders tend not to work as you would expect, so unless I were to train full time v-ray would be too frustrating. Do you think this is true about v-ray???
Infograph - Thanks for the brief summary of what is available, I can keep coming back to that during my training.







