Hi Cluster,
first a couple of questions... Shoot
what version of Maya are you using? 5 Unlimited
are you using MR or the standard render? I'm not sure which one is which. I just play with Render Globals settings, then click BATCH RENDER. Does that answer your question?
what are your rendering settings? It was set to Production Quality as well as the Fluid box itself was set to 250 x 250 Resolution: Then the render size was set to output 320 x 240.
could you e.g. show a couple of rendered image to see how the thingie looks like you are talking about? Here you go, this is a single frame rendered in the middle of the animation.
Frame 16 looks like this as a Production Quality GIF:
the playblast look cool... Thanks
are you rendering it out frame by frame, as single images or as an avi? Frame by frame with file extention name.#.gif, then I assemble it all together in a program like VideoMach.
regards
Strarup
Pure Morning, I can see where you are going with that, I've tried rendering one frame as a Production Quality TIFF (16 bit) vs the Production Quality GIF. And here is the difference:
P.s. That sucker took around 30 minutes to render! I rendered it as a TIFF, then opened it up in Photoshop and saved it as a GIF to lower the size of the file was 247 kb (tiff), now is 10.7 kb (gif) and looks just as clean.
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Now, what do you mean by "worth checking out the docs for any possible speed ups you can achieve" ?
Because I can tell you now, I was doing a batch render with gif's and it took over 5 hours each render, it will likely take 20 hours to render Production Quality TIFF's at (16 bit). This would be much help to me. Please let me know what I should do for speed ups. Thanks.
NitroLiq, The file was created from scratch by me in Photoshop. It was saved as a JPG high quality image. I'm looking at the image on my screen right now and it looks nice and crisp.
If I save this is a TIFF (all 65 frames) it will be a huge file for such a small animation. I want this animation to load up on the web in seconds regardless of Internet Connection Speed. So I'll be taking each and every one of the 65 outputted TIFF Images and and re-saving them as GIF's. Is there any programs out there that will take all the outputted files and all in one pop save them as GIFs? I just don't really wanna do all 65 manually, if so, oh well
So, there's a lesson to be learned here, never output as a gif!! Only covert to a GIF after the image has been outputted with Maya as a TIFF.
Cheers. And Thanks.