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Carrara F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 21 9:55 pm)

 

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Subject: render sharpness


PapaBlueMarlin ( ) posted Sat, 24 November 2007 at 5:29 PM · edited Thu, 25 July 2024 at 12:57 PM

Which render tweener do I use to make the renders look a little more sharp.  Right now, I'm using the linear tweener with the best render settings, but I still have to sharpen the image in Photoshop.  Has anyone experimented enough to know what the idea render settings are?



GKDantas ( ) posted Sat, 24 November 2007 at 5:49 PM

Theres a Filter Sharpness in the render room, that is always set to 75% maybe trying some changes with it you can get a better render like you want to.

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dbigers ( ) posted Sun, 25 November 2007 at 12:09 AM

I think you might be confused about the use of tweeners. I apologise in advance if I am mistaken. The tweener is for animation. It is an interpretation of a change in some property of an object between keyframes. The name comes from the fact that you dont have to figure out all the motion in between keyframes, the program does it for you. In "between" = "Tweener". The program "tweens" the animation between the keyframes, calculating position, velocity, etc. Prior to computer animation programs, animators had to manually draw all frames, the computer tweens between Keyframes. Think of straight lines and bezier curves. Say for instance you have an object that moves between point A and B. With linear, the speed would be the same throughout, which wouldnt be realistic if the object is supposed to accelerate from a stand still. A curve tweener will allow you to show the object building up speed and then slowing back down to a stop. Carrara can do this with Ease in and Ease out on a linear tweener, but using a bezier curve often gives better results. For that particuliar example, the velocity curve would work well too. That example was for motion, but the concept applies to all animatable properties. Now, regarding image shaprness, as GK said, the object accuracy and the antialiasing options are what you want to explore along with the filter sharpness in the render room. The filter sharpness and the AA settings work hand in hand. If you set the filter sharpness high you will most likely need higher antialiasing. AA settings that work great with a filter sharpness of 75% often arent good enough when the filter sharpness is 100%. Resulting in noisy animations/images. The best thing to do is take a black sphere in an empty scene, set the background to white and experiment with all the settings. One last thing, if you are using texture maps, take a look at the filtering options in the image properties. That will have an impact on final image sharpness as well, if you are using texture maps. Hope that helps. Sorry for the long winded explanation. Donnie


GKDantas ( ) posted Sun, 25 November 2007 at 5:29 AM

Long but well done Donnie.

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Miss Nancy ( ) posted Sun, 25 November 2007 at 2:08 PM

maybe he means "sliders" instead of "tweeners". in general, set everything at "best", at the lowest pixel number, at the highest photon count, et al.



PapaBlueMarlin ( ) posted Sun, 25 November 2007 at 2:55 PM

Thanks for the advice...I wasn't exactly sure what a tweener was, but now I think I have a better idea as to how to get sharper renders.



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