hardtwist opened this issue on Sep 09, 2008 · 21 posts
hardtwist posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 1:35 AM
Can any of you all that have Carrara and Vue compare the two please? I am thinking of getting Vue. Is it better than Carrara? I have Carrara6.
Jim
bwtr posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 2:08 AM
Simple.
Download a trial version of Vue.
If you are aware of Carraras capabilities and easy workings I can not imagine, in a million years, that you would buy Vue.
Theres Poser, Vue and THEN Carrara--a true allround 3D App.
(Some apps need Poser and Vue as plugins.)
Brian
bwtr
Tashar59 posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 2:31 AM
LOL, I have both. Vue6 infinity and C6pro. Each has its moments. I use Vue more. I can't stand modeling in Carrara. I'm spoiled, I use modo302.
The first thing I did in Carrara was my avitar. Carrara does have some good option like fire and particles that Vue does not have. This is why I have both.
As bwtr said, get the demos and see what YOU like better and has the Options that you can use the most. It really does not matter what we think. We can only give you our opinions and as you can see the first two replies are completely opposite of each other.![]()
ShawnDriscoll posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 4:48 AM
They both are very slow renderers. Vue specializes in terrains and vegetation. Carrara generalizes in modeling, texturing, animation, and rendering scenes for film and/or illustration.
For content purposes, Vue imports Poser while Carrara imports DAZ.
Both are version 6. Both have version 7's being worked on that don't add much new stuff.
MarkBremmer posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 6:17 AM
I use both and they're both good applications. Vue is more mature regarding it's atmospheric options but Carrara is significantly more versatile as a 3D application. If you have the cash, having both in your toolbox is nice.
Fundamentally, Vue is a content manipulation program. Carrara is a content creation and manipulation program.
sparrownightmare posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 7:24 AM
Um, Carrara 6 allows you to open Poser content just as easily (if not more so( as Poser. A lot of folks have switched completely from using Poser to model and pose characters then render in Carrara, to doing it all in Carrara, I haven't touched Poser in over a year.
Quote - They both are very slow renderers. Vue specializes in terrains and vegetation. Carrara generalizes in modeling, texturing, animation, and rendering scenes for film and/or illustration.
For content purposes, Vue imports Poser while Carrara imports DAZ.
Both are version 6. Both have version 7's being worked on that don't add much new stuff.
hardtwist posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 7:30 AM
Thanks for the replies. You all were a big help.
I did try the demo and I did have V4 at one time. I think I gave it up because it crashed a lot.
I think I just need to stay with Carrara and really try to learn it.
Thanks for your help.
Jim
sparrownightmare posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 7:33 AM
One Caveat. NMake sure you have a fairly powerful machine. Carrara can be a huge memory hog when you start using Poser content and/or start playing with multiple light sources and a lot of transparent, reflective, refractive or complex items.
Quote - Thanks for the replies. You all were a big help.
I did try the demo and I did have V4 at one time. I think I gave it up because it crashed a lot.
I think I just need to stay with Carrara and really try to learn it.Thanks for your help.
Jim
MarkBremmer posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 7:33 AM
Really learning the software is always better than simply having more software. ;-)
Mark
hardtwist posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 7:38 AM
I hear ya Mark. I have been kicking the tires on Carrara for a while now. I guess its time to get in there and learn to drive.
Jim
jt411 posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 4:50 PM
My company has been using both Vue and Carrara for a few years now and they're both great. Vue's Ecosystem creation is unmatched and it renders beautifully, but Carrara is so much more versatile that it's become our weapon of choice.
I strongly disagree with Shonner's claim that Carrara is "very slow." I can get a comparable render out of C6 in less than a quarter of the time it takes Vue and less thant half the time Mental Ray would take.
The nice thing about Carrara is the amount of control it gives you over your render settings. Of course like Mark said, you have to learn the program.
I know we all have different standards, but I've always found Carrara to be very stable and light on resources as well. I have it installed on a few older machines here at the house as well as on my 4 year old laptop and it runs just as smooth as silk :)
hardtwist posted Tue, 09 September 2008 at 11:37 PM
Thanks for the input JT.
Jim
JonnyBravo posted Fri, 12 September 2008 at 2:05 PM
hardtwist posted Fri, 12 September 2008 at 11:24 PM
Thank you JonnyB. I agree. Marks video tutorials that I have viewed are top notch. I will be spending more time with them.
I have decided to work on Carrara. I have Carrara standard not Pro. I have Poser 7 and ZBrush 3.5 and Hex 2.5. I don't think I need anymore programs. If I cant get it done with these there is no hope for me. LOL What with work and all I just haven't had enough time. Y'all know what I mean.
Jim
JonnyBravo posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 1:27 AM
Quote - Thank you JonnyB. I agree. Marks video tutorials that I have viewed are top notch. I will be spending more time with them.
I have decided to work on Carrara. I have Carrara standard not Pro. I have Poser 7 and ZBrush 3.5 and Hex 2.5. I don't think I need anymore programs. If I cant get it done with these there is no hope for me. LOL What with work and all I just haven't had enough time. Y'all know what I mean.Jim
- I think you've made some really good choices.
bwtr posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 2:15 AM
Jim
Have a look at this as a, maybe, better alternative to Z-Brush---things that ZBs dream of!
Brian
bwtr
50parsecs posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 3:14 AM
I just became a 3D-coat customer, and I'm finding it very easy to get around in. I'm stoked about the voxel-sculpting abilities due for the next release!
JonnyBravo posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 3:26 AM
My interest is peaked...thanks guys. Might be a good alternative to ZBrush for alot less money.
ShawnDriscoll posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 3:42 AM
Attached Link: ZBrush intro video
I recommend ZBrush over 3D-Coat. Watch Cesar's videos to see how quickly you can model (sculpt) without spending many hours first just getting your base polygon mesh modeled the old-fashion way.bwtr posted Sat, 13 September 2008 at 5:30 AM
Shonner.
Don't think you are up to either what 3DC does/works and what 3DC V3 Alpha is showing us.
It really is worth investigating---Z-Bs will drool!
Brian
bwtr
MatCreator posted Sat, 27 September 2008 at 12:19 PM
Dont forget Hex as a comparitive tool to ZBrush and Deep Paint. Hex also does the "paint directly on the model" bit as well, not to mention having an awesome plethora of modeling tools to take advantage of. If you can grab it for 2 dollars, do NOT pass it up...
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