Join Adam Crespi for an in-depth discussion in this video Adjusting lighting and exposure, part of 3ds Max: Revit Integration.
- [Instructor] In tandem with render settings…are the exposure settings.…Right now what I've done is simply…put on that exposure so I'm not…completely blowing out the scene.…Actually, I've got a decent dim light going…because there's no light fixtures…in the rest of the building.…I'm isolating the render down to…this test case of this lobby.…What I will do is typically play…with the exposure settings…to make sure that in a rendering when I'm dealing in,…let's say sunlight or bright interiors,…that things will hold up nicely.…That even with a nice bright exposure…I won't get too much blowing out.…
What I'll do for this is to clone…some of my surface mount lights…so I get more light in the space…and then play with the exposure.…I've got surface mount lights over here on the side…and what I'm going to do is to take them…and hold Shift and clone them over,…watching the distance I'm cloning.…There's a six foot offset,…and I'll instance them,…and then I'll take this group of four…and Shift clone it again back into the space.…
Released
11/14/2017- Optimizing Revit files for export
- Breaking up large meshes
- Exporting the Revit model
- Importing the Revit scene
- Adding details to coarse meshes
- Selecting and replacing materials
- Adjusting UV mapping
- Changing light types
- Adjusting lighting and exposure
Share this video
Embed this video
Video: Adjusting lighting and exposure