COPYRIGHT

All resources offered by this blogsite are shared by the authors themselves. Some of them were rewritten with permission and some were collected throughout the internet and exchanged between peers for personal study. Use of any resources offered for commercial purposes is prohibited. Otherwise you need to responsible for any consequences produced! Any profitable behavior of utilizing the resources downloaded from this site is condemned and disdained sternly.

Some of the resources, and data here were shared by the authors freely and we don't have all the capacity to know, if the components, materials inside the scenes were copyright protected. If you feel some resources have infringed your copyright, please contact us. We will delete them as quickly as possible. We won't bear any legal responsibility for the resources. Thanks.

Custom Search

Custom Search

Welcome to SketchUp, Vray and other Resources

Everyone is capable of learning. Learning is part of life. It is a social process of living and bringing everyone to share their inherited resources and discoveries. All of us can influence the life of others through sharing and caring. It is our belief that everyone should be a lifelong learner.

I am putting very important visualization resources and series: tutorials, tips, tricks, VRAY materials and settings, and mini-the-making (MTM) processes.

Yours,

Nomeradona

Thursday 28 June 2012

IES Tutorial in Vray Sketchup by Onel Pabico

Tired of saying why my IES lights are not showing. Here is the tutorial from Onel Pabico that explains why..


Step 1 - Here is my scene with all the accessories and ready to render. Sets your unit. Its is very important that you know your working unit


Steps 2 - After setting the units, add IES Lights. Unlike other lights, IES lights are capable of bringing the real world effects and properties of a real luminaires by means of its photometric data provided by the lights manufacturer.


Step 3: Setup your render parameters, here the initial Setting.





Final render. Then adjust its color with color correction tools found in vray frame buffer

Here is the Final Render.

Another view - see the difference when units is adjusted.

If you are not familiar with IES power amount when the models unit is in meter, try to adjust meter to millimeter and provide lower value for the light. You will find it more comfortable.


Here is the final render.


Here is another example using millimeter as base working units


Here is the final render.

No comments:

Post a Comment