Whether you're just starting out or looking to refine your skills, this channel is your go-to resource for in-depth tutorials, expert tips, and real-world projects in Archviz. From rendering workflows and software like D5 Render and Lumion to advanced techniques in lighting, textures, and AI tools, we’re here to make the learning process easier, faster, and more creative. Subscribe and join a community of passionate designers looking to take their skills to the next level!
Great question, taken from their ToS, Section 4 "You own all Assets You create with the Services to the fullest extent possible under applicable law." Reference document here: docs.midjourney.com/docs/terms-of-service
@@andychristoforou, good to know. When you sign up here are the “Rights You give to Midjourney” By using the Services, You grant to Midjourney, its successors, and assigns a perpetual, worldwide, non-exclusive, sublicensable no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable copyright license to reproduce, prepare derivative works of, publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute text and image prompts You input into the Services, as well as any Assets produced by You through the Service. This license survives termination of this Agreement by any party, for any reason.
Yes, when I reviewed this with Legal, our understanding of why this exists is in case they happen to show one of your images in an any marketing materials more so than MJ wanting to get into design work. There's another clause that's something along the lines of if you're a pro user, they will try to limit the potential of showcasing your work but also on the flip side I wouldn't produce an image and then go and get that built, I'd use it as a spring board for ideas, you know what I mean?
@@andychristoforou This is an interesting discussion. I think it would be important though to be transparent with your clients that you are using MJ and AI. Personally, I'd be more comfortable installing Stable Diffusion with Flux and ComfyUI or Forge on my own local workstation or server, than giving MJ the rights to something that my clients (especially corporate ones) wouldn't want them to have access to.
@@rn4490 For sure - great discussion, for work where we feed a model images to work off of, say a massing model of our designs - we use Flux and SD for the transparent IP around commercial usage. MJ is just used for inspiration/look and feel studies, not design work.
@@StevieMoore Great question, so I think of it this way, if gray is a blank slate, if I use bright colors and I do let's say a 70 Mat Override, there's 30% of it looking at my base materials which if they're bright onbonoxious colors, won't help me when I want a cohesive design. You can do loud colors and just max out the override and it'll ignore it so really it doesn't matter unless you do something less than 100%. Best practice would be a first pass at materials of what you like, then go to Veras.
@@AdilKhan-fn7nz Thanks! Will be dropping part 3 this week, just finished recording it, we'll be tackling the kitchen! Let me know if you want me to cover something specific!
Hey, part 3 is now up and part 4 will be coming probably end of this week! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-UD3pmMzmlXY.htmlsi=2qg6GkZH9dPco8XY
Really normie knowledge. Higher number isn't always better especially in laptops. And currently in CPUs AMD kicks Intel's ass, has been for about 5 years now, especially in laptops as AMD chips use less power to give the same or more performance hence give more battery life as well. Why do you think Intel is having such a bad time while AMD is acquiring other companies? The story is even better for AMD in the data centre space. Edit: oh and GPUs. In GPUs both AMD and Nvidia are good but for designing apps and whatnot Nvidia is better optimised but Nvidia doesn't like to give VRAM which is needed for many productivity apps so it's actually better for productivity to get an older Nvidia GPU with more VRAM for the price of lower end current one's which have less memory. For example last gen 3070 laptop has 8gb memory you can get those for current gen 4050 prices which only have 6gb memory.
@@yellowflash511 Thanks for the detailed reponse, this quick guide is for students who have never looked into purchasing a laptop for architecture uses, you'd be surprised how none of this is common knowledge, even screen size isn't clear to most students entering architecture! Trying to keep this info simple and digestible, cpu for our architecture apps isn't as critical because most don't even use multithreading and rely on a higher clock speed where typically intel is higher, then for gpus on our rendering apps we're seeing better raytracting performance and compatibility with nvidia and for the sake of this quick guide, wanted to point out the naming conventions so people have some idea of what to look for. Many students will unfortunately get something with no dedicated gpu or a laptop with a 1650 that falls below minimum specs Overall I don't disagree with you, but I can only include so much information, just want to relay key info to students, if they want to go down the hardware rabbithole, we have LTT for that lol. Have a good one!
Say im using a sref and it has a object or person in the image sref so when i prompt something it keeps the same person or object in the image. Or it keeps the character at the same distance as the sref no matter what i prompt. Any way to fix that? Hope the question makes sense.
@@A_Warriors_Wisdom Great question so there's two references, image reference uses the images structure (so in your situation, the person and their distance), sref uses the STYLE of that image, whether photo or illustration, you can combine the two. I'll make a video on the image reference, thanks for bringing that up!
Sir i want buy laptop for autocad revit software i am civil engineering student. What should i buy Macbook or any other windows laptop. I am very confused . Please reply and expaln me.
@@Kittu-s3j Sure, at this range our best bet is something discounted, this is $140 off at $760 MSI Thin 15 15.6” 144Hz FHD Gaming Laptop: Intel Core i7-12650H, NVIDIA Geforce RTX 4050, 16GB DDR5, 512GB NVMe SSD, Cooler Boost 5, Win 11: Black B12VE-2023US a.co/d/99McOHp in general you'll need 16gb of RAM and a dedicated video card (that's what the 4050 is, the higher the better though, this will impact performance the most)