this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2024
94 points (99.0% liked)
Blender
2730 readers
5 users here now
A community for users of the awesome, open source, free, animation, modeling, procedural generating, sculpting, texturing, compositing, and rendering software; Blender.
Rules:
- Be nice
- Constructive Criticism only
- If a render is photo realistic, please provide a wireframe or clay render
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
And here's the original one I made back in 2020 ๐
The newer one looks better in many ways. But, it's easier to spot that it's fake because the foreground flowers and the distant mountains are all in focus.
I think I could get such depth of field with my limited and amateur skills and equipment. But, it'd be really difficult: the perfect spot, perfect lens, perfect conditions, and the rest would be luck.
This isn't even criticism as I don't know what your goals are.
Thanks, this is actually super useful feedback because I'm not much of a photographer myself. I used the default Blender 35mm film with I think a 35mm lens at F-stop 10.0. The scene used real-world scales
From what I could find online an F-stop from 8-16 seemed to be an appropriate range for those sorts of lenses, but would you have any other insights? Quite an easy thing to fix for sure but I'm definitely lacking knowledge here
Upon closer examination I see that the foreground is slightly out of focus. But, it looked crystal clear until I zoomed in. The f-stop and lens choices seem solid. Perhaps my feedback is entirely invalid.
Something is off and I'm not sure what. The best I can describe: "It's too perfect". I'm an amateur and have seemingly already gone wrong. A professional photographer would make better observations and have the correct semantics.
Wish I could be of more assistance.