dlk30341 opened this issue on Jun 18, 2005 ยท 8 posts
dlk30341 posted Sat, 18 June 2005 at 9:32 PM
As stated above. This can be PP4 - P6 Whether it be a single item or full scene. I'm very curious. TIA
Fazzel posted Sat, 18 June 2005 at 10:03 PM
Not sure, I usually just do 1200 x 900, which is plenty big enough for anything I have to do. Never had the need to do a poster or a billboard.
ashish_s_india posted Sat, 18 June 2005 at 10:20 PM
I usually do 1800X to 2400X depending on the image n the amount of postwork reqd. More the postwork needed, larger the render.
wyrwulf posted Sat, 18 June 2005 at 10:28 PM
Recently, 3000X4000. Poser 4 limit is 4090X4090 with a workaround of making a one frame animation image file. I experimented a long time ago, and I think I did a 6000X6000 animation image file of a sphere. I haven't tried a complicated image that size, though.
paper-tiger posted Sat, 18 June 2005 at 11:53 PM
Ohh, that limit is good to know. I have been attempting 3000x5000 renders in P6 with no success. (They will begin, but tend to hang until they freeze once a figure comes into view.) Biggest successfully completed render has been 1024x768 at 300dpi, for me.
dlk30341 posted Sun, 19 June 2005 at 9:14 AM
That is good to know wyrwulf....glad to see that :) Thanks for your answers :)
Puntomaus posted Sun, 19 June 2005 at 7:11 PM
5000x6000, 300 dpi, Firefly in Poser 5 - haven't tried this in P6 so far.
Every
organisation rests upon a mountain of secrets ~ Julian
Assange
danamongden posted Sun, 19 June 2005 at 11:12 PM
9000 x 9000 in P5. However, I should point out that it was a trivial scene: a sphere on a plane, both with procedural shaders and reflection. Mostly I was doing it to see if there was a hard-coded upper limit on rendering size. I figure 30x30 at 300dpi was good enough. Now, with real scenes, the biggest was 4500 x 4500, and I had to do tricks with that by doing multiple passes with some of the items removed and then composite it all back together. (See "The Day Her Replacement Arrived" in my gallery.) Usually I just do normal screen resolutions, and then if I need a big print, I go for 150dpi (or less) and then scale up via Photoshop with a bicubic scaling filter.