Peter Guthrie’s Teglverksgata 2 Visualizations

Peter shared a new set of renders for a residential project on the northern edge of Oslo’s Sofienberg park by Logg Arkitektur. An urban visualization integrated in photos he took on site that reminds me a lot of his previous work on the Kilburn Vale Visualizations, which represented (for me) his best work at that time. With these new renders I think Peter has pushed the limits even further, achieving high levels of realism and integration within photos.

I love the dusk images the most, and especially the road shot! Visit Peter’s blog to see his post about this work – teglverksgata 2

34 replies
  1. ChristianMiranda
    ChristianMiranda says:

    What a great set of renderings. That´s pure eyecandy…Well… I think I will stop by Ronen´s blog everyday after my breakfast. It´s just great.

    Peter Guthrie raises the standard (again). The image six is perfect. Superb work overall.

  2. mukul_ar
    mukul_ar says:

    These are photos right? I do not believe them to be renders… Shouldn’t they be on the photography segment of his website? These are unbelievably real!

  3. PatrickEischen
    PatrickEischen says:

    One word, Amazing! Did Peter shoot day and night photographs or only day pictures and converted them into night shots?

      • paguthrie
        paguthrie says:

        @ronenbekerman @PatrickEischen @paguthrie Wow, your blog is so high tech these days Ronen! Yes, I spent a freezing day in Oslo taking photos at different times of the day

  4. benskeen
    benskeen says:

    Perfect!! The glass reflections are soo good. How was this done? Rendered separately then reflections added in photoshop or was the an environment added in max?

  5. benskeen
    benskeen says:

    Perfect!! The glass reflections are soo good. How was this done? Rendered separately then reflections added in photoshop or was the environment added in max?

  6. miguelafi
    miguelafi says:

    Congrats to Paul for another Great Job, always inspiring.

    the trick here is to know if the big tree in front of the building was modelled in 3d.

    my guess is that he added it in 3d to get the shadows and reflections right, the question is how he remove the actual tree from the photos

    great post work

    Felicidades!

  7. miguelafi
    miguelafi says:

    Congrats to Peter for another Great Job, always inspiring.

    the trick here is to know if the big tree in front of the building was modelled in 3d.

    my guess is that he added it in 3d to get the shadows and reflections right, the question is how he remove the actual tree from the photos

    great post work

    Felicidades!

    • paguthrie
      paguthrie says:

      @BBB3 Thanks Bertrand! I take a series of photos, say 10 steps apart, from the front edge of the building to be visualised – pointed at what it would be facing. Then roughly stitch them together in pshop, and then apply it (with an opacity mask) to a simple plane in 3dsmax. Easy 😉

      • paguthrie
        paguthrie says:

        @BBB3 when I say 10 steps apart. I mean stand and take a photo, then walk 10 paces and take another photo. Repeat.

        Warning: you might get some strange looks from passers by!

  8. isucur
    isucur says:

    Absolutely fantastic shots, mood balancing and photo-match. It’s fun exploring the details! Cheers!

  9. 3dStudioPrins
    3dStudioPrins says:

    Another great work Peter!You always have such nice photo real impressions!!Did you photoshop the lightstream of the cars or was it within the original photo?

  10. IsakBergwall
    IsakBergwall says:

    Amazing as always!I didn’t quite get the reflection procedure. Do you place that plane over the windows or facing the windows from some distance to get the reflections?

    And the number 6 image (dusk shot with car light streaks). The tree to the left! any tips on the cutout procedure for the branches that goes over the rendered part? Just lasso tool? 🙂

    Really nice work!

  11. MikeDugenioHansen
    MikeDugenioHansen says:

    I’m particularly interested in how you’ve managed to select “The Tree”, in order to place the 3D behind it?.

    I have a theory that you’d might when “Cleaning” the original photograph, and removing the old building. You’d actually remove the original branches that covered the “site”. And then when you inserted your 3D, you “painted” some trees over it again?

  12. miguelafi
    miguelafi says:

    i see a lot of people wondering how you manage to make the tree in front of the building look so good! @samaimehdi @MikeDugenioHansen @BBB3 @benskeen

    maybe a “PLACING TREE IN FRONT OF BUILDING TUTORIAL” in the making? *lol

    just joking u already make it clear how u do it. congrats again!

  13. bpositive
    bpositive says:

    Amazing images as usual 😉 – Superb integration with photos – I’m also curious to know, how you did with that beautiful old tree?

  14. Chisel
    Chisel says:

    My question is how did you merger so perfectly the 3D with the photo for example how did you remove so perfectly the raw 3D to create the overlapping effect of the trees over the building……Please respond….. Amazing image!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • John Markie Smith
      John Markie Smith says:

       @Chisel Bet a Chisel from Jamaica..a check out the renders them yutes? lol

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