New Product Question - 3D Time Saver, Get More Done...- Anyone Tried It?

MarkR151MarkR151 Posts: 58
edited December 1969 in The Commons

Just wondering if anyone has used the new Tutorial product titled "3D Time Saver:Get More Done In Less Time."

It seems promising, especially for those of us who can't afford to buy a new PC with tons of RAM and cannot afford to wait literally days for rendering. I have to use my comp for other things besides rendering and cannot afford to buy a separate one just for DAZ work.

Anyone tried the things taught in this product? Worth the time & $ ?

Comments

  • MarkR151MarkR151 Posts: 58
    edited December 1969

    Anyone?

  • PennamePenname Posts: 343
    edited December 1969

    I don't have that particular product, but I have some similar of his (maybe came free or a similar course off his own website) offering tips for faster rendering, and they have already paid off for me in time for sure; can't speak to the computer RAM issue as I did live on noodles for months to buy a more powerful machine. You get a lot of hours of instruction, although his style could be compacted a little. I have several of his courses and have never been disappointed in the value of the material, even in cases where I knew a lot of it (e.g. from photography). It does sound promising for your situation. Hope that helps.

  • MarkR151MarkR151 Posts: 58
    edited December 1969

    Thanks Penname.

    Anyone else?

  • Sphinx MagooSphinx Magoo Posts: 586
    edited December 1969

    I'm considering picking it up. I've been running into memory errors in DS 4.5 on my 32-bit Win XP PC and I think some of his methods may help me out. I'd love to just plop everything into one big scene, but my old PC can't handle the strain.

  • ReDaveReDave Posts: 815
    edited December 1969

    I don't have it, unless it was free at some point, but the free versions where all about using layers in Photoshop. Render one light at a time, or even one lighting component (diffuse, specular, ambient, etc.) at a time, then layer them all in Photoshop and adjust their respective strength to get a result you like. If you need more guidance, then purchasing that product will probably be your best bet.

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