
Rendering courtesy of Enzo Appetecchia and Skakki Studio.
But their rendering workflow was long and tedious. Their business goal is to provide the same visual standards found in architecture at a fraction of the cost, according to firm director Enzo Appetecchia. Enzo is hosting a webinar soon — if you’re looking for direction on how to create beautiful renderings, you won’t want to miss it! Read on for a look into Skakki Studio’s transformed workflow, a before-and-after story with a striking result.Before
Skakki Studio used SketchUp for basic venue and set modeling, then integrated Layout with SketchUp for documentation, presentation, and scaled drawings. They used 3DS Max or Blender for more complex scenes, Wysiwyg for lighting and truss design and previz, AutoCAD for drawing 2D plots and editing clients’ files, VRay as a rendering engine, and Photoshop for image touch-ups. If you think about it, that’s a ton of time wasted transitioning files between software. “We used to spend valuable hours importing and exporting models and cleaning up geometries in order for the design to be consistent,” Enzo said. “No external rendering engine can be integrated into Wysiwyg, so our only choice was to re-export the models to other software,” he continued. He found that 3D elements would often have inaccurate or oversimplified geometries when exported.LEARN HOW TO RENDER IN VECTORWORKS!
Skakki chose VRay for rendering but said it struggled with more complex scenes. Rendering frame-by-frame animations would sometimes take their computers days, Enzo said. All in all, Skakki went through a lot of work to produce renderings. Beautiful as they are, why not make the entire process more simplistic without sacrificing quality?