I learned a lot here, thanks for the video. The Dutch camera angle certainly is different but in a good way. And I have the Shot list saved on my playlist.
Yeah the shotlist on youtube is really helpful for getting a behind the scenes of how movies are made. I helps me a lot figuring out how to place my camera, and using light props, and a lot of other stuff also.
It's not really easy to build a scene and keep it interesting. A lot of people will drop the video if you don't make significant progress within 10 minutes of the video. I'm thinking of making another video. But I'm going to have to complete the scene first as usual and then explain the thought process of making it. This video is also a similar scene building video. Creating and using Emissive lights in Daz ruclips.net/video/PzjcYqh2ypc/видео.htmlsi=FEe4TZ4pYO5A8JhF
@@MarkSinister My pet peeve is precisely that; when somebody put up a "tutorial" video and then just races thru it. I often times think to myself, "why do people do that"? It's almost as if someone put a "Barb Wire" up their Arse just to make them speed things up. Thank you, Mark; I linked your video to my brother. He also likes to dabble in Digital Art. 👀
@@MrMonoyo It's the youtube stats on videos. It tells you when people stop watching videos. When a video goes past 10 minutes. If it's not interesting from start to finish, if you run into any lulls or slow down people just stop watching the videos. That's why you have to edit your videos so it's always interesting everywhere. But since I'm not a video editor. I don't take the time to learn video editing. I rather be using that time to learn my 3D. That's why I've started doing tutorials in the beginning of my videos. Then the other half is just me messing around and explaining how I use it in a render. This way if you just want to learn, it's right at the begin part. If you watch the rest of the video it's all good. If I ever get monetize by youtube. I'll start actually video editing and making render content directly on youtube. But since I'm not earning anything. I just post whatever I learned that I think people would find handy.
Really great tips about lighting, composition! I started out doing the same, just putting people in the scene not thinking about the intent of the scene. What is it showing the viewer, what is the focus, etc. I had to think about how it would look if I was there IRL. Once I started thinking about it like that my renders started to get a more natural/life-like feel to it. Hope the OP of this sees this.
Yeah, when I made this video I had already given the OP feedback on where I learned to setup my scenes and what you can do to improve his renders going forward.
Keep it up bro. This wasn't too harsh either. This is how people learn and get better.
Thanks. I'll try to keep it up.
I learned a lot here, thanks for the video. The Dutch camera angle certainly is different but in a good way. And I have the Shot list saved on my playlist.
Yeah the shotlist on youtube is really helpful for getting a behind the scenes of how movies are made. I helps me a lot figuring out how to place my camera, and using light props, and a lot of other stuff also.
@@MarkSinister I'm going to try to recreate this scene for my practice. I'll show the results when I'm done.
@@MssPsychoSocial Cool I'll look forward to it.
Thank you for sharing your Scena Building experience, it's good. Not too many Dazzers do a complete Scene building YT. "Tutoring" video.
It's not really easy to build a scene and keep it interesting. A lot of people will drop the video if you don't make significant progress within 10 minutes of the video.
I'm thinking of making another video. But I'm going to have to complete the scene first as usual and then explain the thought process of making it.
This video is also a similar scene building video.
Creating and using Emissive lights in Daz
ruclips.net/video/PzjcYqh2ypc/видео.htmlsi=FEe4TZ4pYO5A8JhF
@@MarkSinister My pet peeve is precisely that; when somebody put up a "tutorial" video and then just races thru it. I often times think to myself, "why do people do that"?
It's almost as if someone put a "Barb Wire" up their Arse just to make them speed things up.
Thank you, Mark; I linked your video to my brother. He also likes to dabble in Digital Art. 👀
@@MrMonoyo It's the youtube stats on videos. It tells you when people stop watching videos. When a video goes past 10 minutes. If it's not interesting from start to finish, if you run into any lulls or slow down people just stop watching the videos.
That's why you have to edit your videos so it's always interesting everywhere. But since I'm not a video editor. I don't take the time to learn video editing. I rather be using that time to learn my 3D.
That's why I've started doing tutorials in the beginning of my videos. Then the other half is just me messing around and explaining how I use it in a render.
This way if you just want to learn, it's right at the begin part. If you watch the rest of the video it's all good.
If I ever get monetize by youtube. I'll start actually video editing and making render content directly on youtube. But since I'm not earning anything. I just post whatever I learned that I think people would find handy.
@@MarkSinister Long Live Creative Freedom.
@@MrMonoyo Long Live!✊
Really great tips about lighting, composition! I started out doing the same, just putting people in the scene not thinking about the intent of the scene. What is it showing the viewer, what is the focus, etc. I had to think about how it would look if I was there IRL. Once I started thinking about it like that my renders started to get a more natural/life-like feel to it. Hope the OP of this sees this.
Yeah, when I made this video I had already given the OP feedback on where I learned to setup my scenes and what you can do to improve his renders going forward.