From the course: SketchUp: Rendering with V-Ray 3
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V-Ray scene export - SketchUp Tutorial
From the course: SketchUp: Rendering with V-Ray 3
V-Ray scene export
- [Instructor] In this penultimate exercise for both the chapter and the course, we're going to take a look at a tool in V-Ray for SketchUp that can help massively when it comes to working in a multi-application or perhaps even a multi-studio pipeline, this being the ability we have in V-Ray for SketchUp to export a dark VR scene file. To demonstrate, we're going to be using a version of our shelf scene that we will assume needs to be passed off to another studio in order for them to add extra elements to the project, ones that perhaps are outside our area of expertise. In this instance, we will be showing how we can take our scene into 3D Studio Max but what we show here could just as easily be used to create a file for using say the V-Ray standalone engine or any application that can import VR scene files. Creating our .vr scene from inside SketchUp is very straightforward as all we need do with our scene loaded of course is come to the Extensions menu and from the V-Ray and Export…
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(Locked)
Generating a caustic effect4m 22s
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Stereoscopic 3D rendering2m 41s
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VR made easy3m 2s
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(Locked)
Using V-Ray objects: Fur3m
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Using V-Ray objects: Proxies4m 35s
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(Locked)
Using V-Ray objects: The V-Ray clipper3m 28s
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(Locked)
Working with displacement3m 45s
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(Locked)
V-Ray scene export3m 22s
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(Locked)
Adding aerial perspective4m 28s
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(Locked)
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