Forum Moderators: TheBryster
Bryce F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 02 3:02 am)
About the rendering. You can actually stop a render, save and then resume with the "dot" next to the "render"...dot.
Rudolf Herczog
Digital Artist
www.rochr.com
At that dimension size, you will have to re-render. If it was something simple like, an 800x600 pic, you could up your desktop to 1024x768, make your bryce document window 800x600, give your half-rendered pic the same name as the .br4 file, and up it would come along with the file when you opened it. Then all you would have to do is plop render the missing piece. BUT...at 5091x1831....you be fubar-ed. Have to re-render, sorry. AgentSmith
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I'm in the process of rendering a large file to disk and have run into some trouble. This file has some volumetric materials and is large enough pixelwise to make the following a reasonable expenditure of time versus just re-rendering... First time I ran it the power went out and I have a half rendered image. Knowing that I can't get Bryce to start where it stopped I tried shrinking the height of the image and repositioning the camera but the two images didn't merge. I could see a difference in angle. So I flipped the camera 180 degrees in an attempt to recreate the problem but this time have the bottom half to salvage and merge with the top. Well, all of a sudden it was daytime in the image. When I flipped the director's view (my primary view for rendering), night turned into day. I managed to proceed with this option but I had to change the scene to a daylight scene in order for it to render as night. :) Just something strange I wanted to pass along. Moral of the story; Uniterruptable Power Supply.