7 Tips For Exterior Renderings With Vray Notes
7 Tips For Exterior Renderings With Vray Notes
7 Tips For Exterior Renderings With Vray Notes
• https://sketchup.school/gwk
Click here to download the Rule of Thirds .png file
• In SketchUp, open your Styles dialog
• In the Edit tab, select Watermark and click the “+”
• Follow the steps, setting it up as an Overlay, Stretch to Fit Entire Window, and
unlock the Aspect Ratio
#2 Choose the Right Lighting
Your first priority is to get your lighting right. To start, be sure you follow these steps:
Then decide on whether to use V-Ray’s default Sun or a V-Ray Dome Light:
#3 Use Realistic Materials
Once your lighting is set-up, you can turn-off Material Override. But your basic
SketchUp materials won’t look great. Swap them for ones that come with V-Ray:
3) Right-click on the V-Ray Material and pick the option for Apply to Selection
#4 Fill-in the Environment
While you can fill-in the Environment later in Photoshop, here are some tips for
handling it in SketchUp and V-Ray:
1) When your image is finished rendering, in the V-Ray Frame Buffer, click on the
Show Corrections Control icon
2) Also click on Force Color Clamping. This will show you the burned-out areas in
your image (as strange colors).
3) Turn-on Exposure, then click the down arrow to show the controls. Adjust the
Highlight Burn until the strange Force Color Clamping colors go away.
You might also consider trying other Corrections Controls. When done, click the Save
icon to save the corrected image.
BONUS: Exterior Rendering Resources
HDR Images (for Dome Lights)
Poliigon (https://www.poliigon.com)
is a great place to find HDR images to
light your model. While most images
can be purchased, there are a few free
images you can use to try Poliigon out.
Realistic Materials
Poliigon (https://www.poliigon.com)
is also a great place to find realistic
materials, along with all the files you
need to automatically configure
Reflection, Refraction, Bump/Normal
Mapping and more. Most materials need
to be purchased, but again there are
free ones you can try out first.
https://sketchup.school/6ij
Be sure to watch this tutorial to help
you set-up materials correctly.
https://sketchup.school/6ij
Skatter (https://getskatter.com/) is a
SketchUp extension that helps you
scatter large numbers of objects in your
model. While you can scatter anything,
it is especially helpful for filling-in your
environment by scattering a large
amount of trees, bushes, grass, rocks,
pebbles and more. They are all
imported as low-polygon proxies that
render in high resolution detail in V-Ray.
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We hope that our Vray for SketchUp —
How to Create a Photorealistic
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Rendering Part 3 (Exteriors) video and
these notes have gotten you started
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