From the course: SketchUp: Rendering with V-Ray 3

Unlock the full course today

Join today to access over 22,600 courses taught by industry experts or purchase this course individually.

V-Ray Scene (.vrscene) import

V-Ray Scene (.vrscene) import - SketchUp Tutorial

From the course: SketchUp: Rendering with V-Ray 3

Start my 1-month free trial

V-Ray Scene (.vrscene) import

- [Instructor] For lots of artists these days, both those employed by studios and those in the freelance community, moving geometry and even full scenes between applications over the course of a project, has become a regular occurrence. And whilst industry standards, such as Autodesk, FBX, and DWG formats can get us part of the way there, what they don't give is the ability for us to work with render engine specific items, such as V-Ray materials. For those using V-Ray 3.6 and upwards in SketchUp, though, that particular problem has potentially, at least, somewhat disappeared, thanks to the V-Ray scene object. Originally developed as a way to render scenes using the V-Ray standalone engine, independently of a host application, such as Max or SketchUp, the V-Ray scene file can include everything that is needed, in order to create a finished render. All without ever opening that file in a 3D application. What comes through the pipeline, when we save out a V-Ray scene file, well, we can…

Contents