As more and more car owners realize how unlimited their choices are becoming in building their ultimate classic, they are sometimes held back by indecision. This is where renderings enter the picture.
If you’re unfamiliar with the term, I’ll explain what a rendering is and show you how a rendering can make that huge project a reality.
A rendering is basically an artist’s drawing of your finished car, using your input and ideas for how you want it to look. There are many benefits of this, the most obvious being you can change a bumper, wheel or color scheme a lot quicker, cheaper and easier on paper than you can on the actual car. And today’s renderings are not just a hand painting that cannot be changed after it’s done. There are many rendering artists that can provide high resolution photos of your finished car with the help of computers, showing different angles, and with the flexibility of making changes before the project progresses.
For those of you who decide to use renderings, the up front cost of paying a rendering artist to produce your ideas in print can far be offset by the costs of making mistakes further down the road. Having to re-do or undo something you could’ve avoided from the beginning is not only costly, it can also be frustrating enough to put everything on hold for who knows how long.
To find a rendering artist in your area, try the Internet, ask around, go to car shows, and even talk to your local body shops.
Brian Hallaert is the founder of [http://wheelgoodtimes.com], a site for classic car lovers to find useful information on everything automotive.
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