![]() If you are producing paid work for clients I think 1080p should be your own personal goal for the final draft. Personally, I rarely go with anything less than 1080p (1080 x 1920 resolution) for client work on the final render. The trick with this is finding the balance between your rendering capabilities and the best product possible. However, rendering even the shortest scenes at high resolution can take days without proper render farms. ![]() If rendering were easy, the answer to this question would be as high resolution as possible. Only on the smallest screens or from the furthest away would this look anything less than something from the 1990s. Spoiler alert: you shouldn’t be exporting at 480 for your final render. So what resolution should we be exporting anyways? Well, I’m actually surprised at how many YouTube videos I see with the maximum resolution as 480, even in 2014. Poor rendering- especially at poor resolution- can really take away from an otherwise excellent visualization. While most of the attention in visualization is given to the modeling, animating and other visualization of the project, the final rendering is often all that is ever seen. ![]() NovemBlog, Commentary 1080, 2k, 4k, 720, high quality, lumion, output, pixels, quality, render, rendering, resolution, transportation, visualization
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