Quote
Originally posted by Lequis MX:
**As some of you may be aware, I am a graphics designer. I also read most of the topics on graphics programs, leading me to downloaded the Strata 3D demo... I can't figure out what's so great about it. I've always used Bryce 3 for EV graphics, and it has produced some very nice work. They aren't professional quality, but they can compete with a lot of the standard EV graphics....
I'm not quite sure how to phrase this, but I'm a bit confused about Strata... how to use it and all... and if I should just stick with B3 or try and utilize strata to its fullest (demo) extent?
Any ideas on what's good and what's not in the world of graphics...?
-Lequis
(sorry if this message was incredibly unclear)
**
I'm in same boat as you are, only my copy of Strata seems to have been damaged in the mail and would never open. I've tried a half-dozen shareware aps, I own and use Amorphium1.0, RDD 5.5, Poser3, I've demo'd Bryce4 and Poser4 and Amorphium2 and I have Amapi kicking around somewhere....
And, really, I keep coming back to Bryce3d. I build the models elsewhere, of course, but aligning, texturing, lighting, setting up animations, even the speed and fluidity of the interface is vastly more pleasurable in Bryce. RDD, particularly, runs like a bad PC port, drags a mouse like skipping a flat stone across a pond, and crashes on an almost predictable basis.
Bryce has limitations, of course. Lack of modelling tools, particularly. Also, it only does ray-tracing, and without much control over the parameters. Here's a couple things I can do in a Ray Dream animation I could never do in Bryce without lengthly work-arounds; particle effects (smoke trails), lense flares, spline animation (for more fluid organic movements), .mov textures (yes, you can have a texture that is itself an animation)...
Some people I hang out with sing songs in praise of Maya, Max, and Hash's Animation Master, and a couple other things in the $200 - $600 range. I'm planning myself to try the new, less-buggy Carrara and also upgrade to Poser4.
Um...in short, it is a hard question, and you are really the only one who can find a package of 3d applications you are happy with. If you can get involved in a class or school, you may be able to try out more variety of software including some of the expensive upper-end stuff. Plus, there's that academic discount -- not a small savings!
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everywhere else, it's --
"Nomuse"