Hi guys and gals, I recently finished my demo reel and website.
I would love some feedback. Everything from my modeling to overall presentation.
I'm thinking about removing 1 or 2 assets in my demo reel to shorten it. I'm thinking 2mins is a bit long.
Any opinions?
Demo Reel in HD
https://vimeo.com/64114257
Website:
http://polybob.com
*website updated 05/13/2013
Made portfolio main page. Moved demo reel to bottom.
** 5/22/2013
I know demo reels aren't as important as portfolios. but I re composited my reel anyway.
Moved the intro to outro, removed a prop and shortened the boxcar rotation to make the video less time consuming.
Removed some unnecessary info
Replies
Also, your pictures are your main selling point, so it's critical that you have your name and contact information on each - employers tend to download and pass around images so it's best to make things easy for them when they try to contact you.
For the same reason, I'd do away with the slide show and replace it with individual thumbnails that the user can click to enlarge. With the slide show, it's very difficult to download the images, whereas with normal images you can simply right-click to save them.
Your work is quite nice overall, but it does seem a bit limited at the moment - really just the one scene with additional pages showcasing props from the scene. While it's certainly better to have fewer pieces of high quality than many low quality pieces, I would recommend working on a second scene and posting that as soon as you can raise it to the quality of the first.
Some of your textures - such as the wood on the box car and the shack, seem rather noisy. Also, the weathering feels rather generic; wood that is uniformly aged, for instance, without showing the directional effects of wind, sun, and rain.
You are also lacking subtle details that should be visible. On the shack, for instance, nails and their accompanying rust streaks, should be clearly visible on the boards, especially those nailed across the door.
On the electrical panel, it might have made more sense to separate the warning label from the front of the panel. The you could have enlarged that part of the texture while reducing the remainder. This would let you use your texels more efficiently.
The wooden lathes on the building on the right side of your main image don't look realistic.
When rails cross a paved road. they are embedded in the road, so the top of the rail is (roughly) at the same height as the top of the road. Also, there is a layer of gravel under the ties.
I'll for sure make the changes.
@DWalker and @PyrZern
I never knew about recruiters downloading and passing around images. Do you think is would be a good idea to have a link to a rar file of my work? for easy access.
@DWalker
Thanks for the advice on my scene. I wasn't even thinking about some of that stuff.
I can't believe I forgot about the nails. This info will definitely make me a better artist.
+1 on this, first thing I did was look for the page with the stills
Yea, will switch it soon.
During school, the demo reel was drilled into my head as being so important and is what gets you a job. And the goal was to have an amazing demo reel.
there is a lot of misconceptions you learn while in school.
I wouldn't bother with a zip file containing all the images - they'll typically just choose a few of the best (or most representative) images.
better?
http://polybob.com
@DWalker
Thanks about the link
Also, 1-2 images per asset. 2-4 per environment, depending on size and whether you know for sure it's doing you GOOD to have more. Some people smash their folios with badly composed angles just to fill it out. 2 nicely composed shots keeps the viewer interested and wanting more, then a third, if needed.
Basically, it looks like you have a whole lot of images for not a lot of work. If you condense it, it would be a decent start:)
p.s. your box car makes me want to do a 1960's train station:)
Thanks, I'll make the changes on the maps.
And I'll see what shots I can take out.
And a 1960's train station would be sweet!
go for it haha
Website layout is good, but visually, there is so much grey. Tons of grey.
You need contrast, it needs to be in your face.
Grey font on grey images on grey background.
Make some of the grey fonts white. Make your webpage background a way darker grey.
Be consistent with your fonts. You use a serif with totally insane intense shadows on your watermarks (which is ok) but then you use the same serif with thin outlines on your frontpage. And then you use a grey sans serif for your headliner and other text. Try beeing consistent.
Your contact page is also tons of grey. Get white text in for the headliners id say
Also text spacing. Devil is in the details. (Paintover not accurate)
Thanks for the tips. I'll work on the website over time