Eler - Turn any 3D model into a photorealistic render
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Upload a SketchUp, Revit or 3D Max model, pick a camera angle, and get a photorealistic render in about a minute. No plugins, no GPU, no render farm - just your browser.
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Hey PH! I'm Constantine, founder of Eler.
I kept hearing the same frustration from architects and interior designers: getting a
photorealistic render meant either learning complex software, waiting days for outsourced
visuals, or spending hours babysitting a render engine. They just wanted to see what their
space would look like, quickly, from any angle, and get back to designing.
So I built Eler:
- Upload a SketchUp, GLB, FBX file, or even a plain image
- Navigate to any camera angle in a browser-based 3D preview
- Hit render, photorealistic result in about a minute
- Nothing to install, no GPU required
The thing I'm most proud of: material consistency across views. With most AI rendering tools,
you render the living room from the doorway and the oak floor looks warm and natural. Render
the kitchen close-up and suddenly it's a different shade, different grain. Show both to a
client and they ask "is this the same project?"
Eler treats your model as one coherent scene, not a series of disconnected single-image
generations. Same materials, every angle.
Would love to hear from anyone who works with 3D models. What would make this genuinely useful
Replies
Hey PH! I'm Constantine, founder of Eler.
I kept hearing the same frustration from architects and interior designers: getting a
photorealistic render meant either learning complex software, waiting days for outsourced
visuals, or spending hours babysitting a render engine. They just wanted to see what their
space would look like, quickly, from any angle, and get back to designing.
So I built Eler:
- Upload a SketchUp, GLB, FBX file, or even a plain image
- Navigate to any camera angle in a browser-based 3D preview
- Hit render, photorealistic result in about a minute
- Nothing to install, no GPU required
The thing I'm most proud of: material consistency across views. With most AI rendering tools,
you render the living room from the doorway and the oak floor looks warm and natural. Render
the kitchen close-up and suddenly it's a different shade, different grain. Show both to a
client and they ask "is this the same project?"
Eler treats your model as one coherent scene, not a series of disconnected single-image
generations. Same materials, every angle.
Would love to hear from anyone who works with 3D models. What would make this genuinely useful
for your workflow?