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I personally have never liked photographic backdrops, no matter how well scaled, no matter how era-appropriate.The reason is that real-life photos, to me, always possess a quality that somehow makes them stand out like sore thumbscompared to the layout in front of them. Even if the layout is magnificent, I always see an element of it looking like a "cartoon" in front of a real life scene.
I'm not so sure its a matter of one versus the other. It seems to me that the trick/skill may be in how well you can BLEND the forground with the background, what ever form it is. See: The work of Danneman - for hints. What detracts, to my eye, is the contrast between the two. I'm playing with elements of each on my layout. (You can view the awful results in the Layout Engineering Reports section.) I do not have access to a large printer and have "miles and miles" of sky. There fore, I was trying to seek a marriage of the two worlds. Oh well, I tried.In your case, I would try printed backdrops with elements from the actual location you are modelling. Maybe, being in your position, you can control the inks/shades to better match the foreground cover where the sky and ground elements actually meet.
Hey Lee, that 2nd photo is really nice!
Somewhere in the Smoky Mountain Rain... This is a 4000x1500 render, took 5 minutes to design and 4 minutes to render (on four core-duo pc's):Here is link to see it larger:http://www.louisjudice.com/DigitalIllustrations/Digital-Renders/i-WMhqWrC/0/X3/smokymtn-X3.jpg