[flow_default] Transcription for audio/AITJJSORT/Blender Course - Advanced Interior Visualization Training/1 - Introduction/1 - Introduction.wav
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audio_AITJJSORT_Blender Course - Advanced Interior Visualization Training_1 - Introduction_1 - Introduction.json
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{
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"file": "1 - Introduction.wav",
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"transcription": {
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"audio_file": "1%20-%20Introduction.wav",
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"text": "Welcome to the first lesson of this course. As I mentioned earlier, in this course we will create a visualization of an apartment with a mezzanine. It will be quite a large apartment in an open space style. In this course, we will place a significant emphasis on working with detail, starting from PBR materials and extracting from them the best aspects such as various interesting reflections and different irregularities that add that special touch to our models and visualizations. We will also focus on creating interesting compositions, intriguing frames, and selecting appropriate lighting. While preparing this course, I created several frames and I hope that in the end, as the final result, we will be able to replicate these frames almost one-to-one. I will show you the frames I managed to create. Some will be in square proportions, one-to-one others in four-to-three proportions and yet others in different proportions, three-to-four. The first frame showing our apartments in a one-to-one proportion. The next frame will be a close-up, which means a zoom in on a detail. Another frame which is also a kind of close-up on a little bit more. Various elements. Next, frames that show us the apartment from the other side. Several frames including this one which shows us the apartment from a top view. Here is another frame slightly from above. Here we have a frame showing us our apartment from the perspective we have already seen in the previous frame. Here is another frame of this type. A frame slightly from above. A frame of the entire apartment. And night views. A night view of the entire apartment. Details. Another view of the entire apartment in a night shot. A view slightly from above. And yet another frame of the entire apartment. As for the appearance of our scene in the program, in Blender, it will look like this. Here at the top, there is a mezzanine, which I have hidden at this moment to make the entire view more readable. internet, with the help of which I created this mood board. It allowed me to outline the direction of action as well as the color scheme and atmosphere I wanted to achieve. Then I created a draft version of the scene and with the support of artificial intelligence, I made a more detailed mood board that corresponded more or less accurately to my scene. As you can see on the mood boards and the previously presented visualizations, the entire atmosphere of our apartment is quite raw. Here we will find a lot of concrete, a lot of plaster with a distinct texture, a lot of dark wood, and generally a lot of grays and blacks. But there are also accents that break this rawness, such as panels in a neutral colour, and accessories like the sink here, decorations, and kitchen walls. As well as such real details, such nuances like this rather elegant one here, a little box from Louis Vuitton. I think the results achieved are quite interesting. The style in these visualisations is rather uncommon. On a daily basis, it definitely differs from the typical appearance of standard apartments and houses. That's all for the introduction. In the next lesson, we will move on to some basic information about working in Blender, working with the interface in this program, and organizing the folders we will use during this course.",
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"language": "en",
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"duration": 242.63,
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"timestamp": "2025-12-10T17:32:56.364890"
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},
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"timestamp": "2025-12-10T17:32:56.368155",
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"processing_time_seconds": 66.36452913284302
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}
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