Really useful video, really good to have someone who explains why things are set at what they should be set to and when to change in different scenes. Thanks!
Thank you for the tutorial! That was very helpful. Could you please also make one for animation rendering? You mentioned it briefly, but a detailed tutorial would be great!
I was so frustrated, that my Mac Studio seemed to be so much slower than yours, until I realized (after nearly 1 year tbh), that hybrid rendering and both, my GPU AND CPU where turned on by default in C4d. Since then it works pretty speedy.
@@jav0acr As I said, in the redshift settings I turned off hybrid rendering and disabled the CPU. The rest of the optimizations where the usual suspects coverded in many tutorials. Mostly I use only Brute force for primary & secondary rays. I also mostly don‘t use the built in denoisers; instead I use Neat Videos reduce noise plugin in in After effects (100 times faster and tons of settings).
Thanks a lot! very important to know! I have a question: does it can be useful to render on a low quality that makes a noisy image and then Denoise and Uprez the result with AI Softwares/Plugins?
It will force AI to regenerate new elements in the video, and that sometimes can be what you want and sometimes not what you want. And since AI is statistical models based on data base, every render might be slightly different, based on what statistically it chooses to do from the database. Usually if you are going for more stylized look and no recognizable human faces or letters, it can work a lot better than if you have to keep it photo realistic.
If I render in a higher resolution, do I also need to increase the samples or something else? Or are these settings kind of universally usable no matter the resolution?
Thank you for the tutorial! That was very helpful. Could you please also make one for animation rendering? You mentioned it briefly, but a detailed tutorial would be great!
Be sure to record your videos at higher than 1080p, because you use a small UI and many things are blurry in the video.
Brilliant as always Elly. Looking forward to the project file.
Really useful video, really good to have someone who explains why things are set at what they should be set to and when to change in different scenes. Thanks!
Thank you for the tutorial! That was very helpful. Could you please also make one for animation rendering? You mentioned it briefly, but a detailed tutorial would be great!
Thank you! so amazing
This is very helpful. Thank you.
Thanks so much for this!
Really useful video!
really helpful!
awesome... thank you
Thanks! One of the most helpful videos on this channel. Would love more videos exactly like this about other parts as well
I was so frustrated, that my Mac Studio seemed to be so much slower than yours, until I realized (after nearly 1 year tbh), that hybrid rendering and both, my GPU AND CPU where turned on by default in C4d. Since then it works pretty speedy.
Could you help me and tell me what configuration you have to make the benefit of Mac Studio? i have an M1 Max and I need help. 🙏
@@jav0acr As I said, in the redshift settings I turned off hybrid rendering and disabled the CPU. The rest of the optimizations where the usual suspects coverded in many tutorials. Mostly I use only Brute force for primary & secondary rays. I also mostly don‘t use the built in denoisers; instead I use Neat Videos reduce noise plugin in in After effects (100 times faster and tons of settings).
Thanks a lot! very important to know! I have a question: does it can be useful to render on a low quality that makes a noisy image and then Denoise and Uprez the result with AI Softwares/Plugins?
It will force AI to regenerate new elements in the video, and that sometimes can be what you want and sometimes not what you want. And since AI is statistical models based on data base, every render might be slightly different, based on what statistically it chooses to do from the database. Usually if you are going for more stylized look and no recognizable human faces or letters, it can work a lot better than if you have to keep it photo realistic.
If I render in a higher resolution, do I also need to increase the samples or something else? Or are these settings kind of universally usable no matter the resolution?
I'd find it more useful to see before + after settings as screenshots please. This video is very long
Worth watching though so you know why the settings are what they are
Thank you for the tutorial! That was very helpful. Could you please also make one for animation rendering? You mentioned it briefly, but a detailed tutorial would be great!