Hi Everyone,
I am a quite inexperienced when it comes to rendering in IV, the most I know is to use ray tracing or render in the IV render environment.
I currently have been tasked with creating render of some equipment but must have a logo on it and a table of information.
Could anyone advise the best way to do this? I was thinking of rendering the image and then opening it up in paint, placing the logo and table and then saving. I'm not too sure what the consequences will be. Whether it will lose resolution or stay the same?
At the end this needs to be printed and placed on a wall so Ideally I don't want to lose too much resolution.
Thanks
IV 2023
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Adding external logo and table is easier to do in another software, but I don't think Paint is the way to go, as you will not be able to save in a format that allows you to go back and edit later. If I'm working with images and text (the table) I prefer Adobe InDesign. But it's a bit pricey though and has a learning curve. You could actually use MS Word or OpenOffice Writer (free!) if your requirements are humble.
A free alternative to InDesign is https://www.scribus.net/
Yes, Excel will most likely work just fine. Give it a go!
Is this for presentation, PDF or print?
Hi!
You can place the image logo in a sketch to add the logo to the model, but... to render the model + logo, you have to use DECAL tool first, using the image you placed in a sketch and selecting the face where the logo must be.
@CCarreiras Thanks for the response.
It's not exactly what I am looking for but it's good to know so thanks!
I was actually looking to do the below with a high quality render to print in A3
For a 300 DPI print on A3 you need a rendering at around 3500 x 5000. If you use a white background you could get away with much less as the actual product covers a lot smaller area than the printed sheet. And by having a white background, you'll save a massive amounts of ink, too! 😄
If you use ray tracing to render, after rendering, you can export the image with the dimensions you need:
For large sizes, i use the TIFF format:
Tip: there's an option to clear the background (to white)
If you want a transparent background, you have to select PNG image format
You can use graphic editors to compose the final image.
I don't suggest MS PAINT, i would go with Photoshop or the free option GIMP, since these programs work with layers here you can have the participants in each layer and tweak position, transparency, etc.
But... you can keep it simple... i use a lot PowerPoint (everybody knows how to use PowerPoint) with nice results, just resize the page and make your composition:
Yes, it's normal to take some time, since it has to process a different (bigger) resolution from the "standard resolution".
For A3 resolution, you will need images with:
Horizontal mode: 4960 x 3500 pixels(300dpi)
Vertical mode: 3500 x 4960 pixels(300dpi)
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