3D Clothing & Apparel Design Services

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Art Vizio is a full service 3D Design studio in Baton Rouge, Louisiana which offers its 3D apparel design services nationwide - local service areas include New Orleans Lafayette Hammond Kenner Denham Springs LA ~ nationwide areas that can be serviced include Mobile Phoenix Little Rock Los Angeles Denver Boulder Hartford Dover Miami Atlanta Boise Chicago Indianapolis.  Other cities that we can offer our 3D clothing and apparel design services to include Topeka Biloxi Birmingham Augusta Annapolis Boston Lansing Detroit St. Paul Biloxi Santa Fe Albany Raleigh Bismarck Salem Houston Dallas Amarillo San Antonio Salt Lake City Richmond Charleston Madison and Cheyenne, nearby states close to Louisiana include Texas Arkansas Kentucky Mississippi Alabama Georgia Tennessee and Florida.

Contact Diego Rivera - Consultant & Owner: (225) 772-6281

Email: info@art-vizio.com

Art-Vizio.com | 13675 Coursey Blvd | Baton Rouge Louisiana 70817

3D computer graphics are different from 2D computer graphics in that a three-dimensional representation of geometric data is stored in the computer for the purposes of performing calculations and rendering 2D images. Such images may be for later display or for real-time viewing. Despite these differences, 3D computer graphics rely on many of the same algorithms as 2D computer vector graphics in the wire frame model and 2D computer raster graphics in the final rendered display. In computer graphics software, the distinction between 2D and 3D is occasionally blurred; 2D applications may use 3D techniques to achieve effects such as lighting, and primarily 3D may use 2D rendering techniques.

3D computer graphics are often referred to as 3D models. Apart from the rendered graphic, the model is contained within the graphical data file. However, there are differences. A 3D model is the mathematical representation of any three-dimensional object (either inanimate or living). A model is not technically a graphic until it is visually displayed. Due to 3D printing, 3D models are not confined to virtual space. A model can be displayed visually as a two-dimensional image through a process called 3D rendering, or used in non-graphical computer simulations and calculations.

Nationwide 3D Clothing & Apparel service areas:

AL - Montgomery, Alabama
AK - Juneau, Alaska
AZ - Phoenix, Arizona
AR - Little Rock, Arkansas
CA - Sacramento, California
CO - Denver, Colorado
CT - Hartford, Connecticut
DE - Dover, Delaware
FL - Tallahassee, Florida
GA - Atlanta, Georgia
HI - Honolulu, Hawaii
ID - Boise, Idaho
IL - Springfield, Illinois
IN - Indianapolis, Indiana
IA - Des Moines, Iowa
KS - Topeka, Kansas
KY - Frankfort, Kentucky
LA - Baton Rouge, Louisiana
ME - Augusta, Maine
MD - Annapolis, Maryland
MA - Boston, Massachusetts

MI - Lansing, Michigan
MN - St. Paul, Minnesota
MS - Jackson, Mississippi
WY - Cheyenne, Wyoming
MO - Jefferson City, Missouri

MT - Helena, Montana
NE - Lincoln, Nebraska
NV - Carson City, Nevada
NH - Concord, New Hampshire
NJ - Trenton, New Jersey
NM - Santa Fe, New Mexico
NY - Albany, New York
NC - Raleigh, North Carolina
ND - Bismarck, North Dakota
OH - Columbus, Ohio
OK - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
OR - Salem, Oregon
PA - Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
RI - Providence, Rhode Island
SC - Columbia, South Carolina
SD - Pierre, South Dakota
TN - Nashville, Tennessee
TX - Austin, Texas
UT - Salt Lake City, Utah
VT - Montpelier, Vermont
VA - Richmond, Virginia
WA - Olympia, Washington
WV - Charleston, West Virginia
WI - Madison, Wisconsin
Washington D.C.

Rendering converts a model into an image either by simulating light transport to get photorealistic images, or by applying some kind of style as in non-photorealistic rendering. The two basic operations in realistic rendering are transport (how much light gets from one place to another) and scattering (how surfaces interact with light). This step is usually performed using 3D computer graphics software or a 3D graphics API. The process of altering the scene into a suitable form for rendering also involves 3D projection which allows a three-dimensional image to be viewed in two dimensions.*

*content courtesy of wikipedia

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