Sketchup+VrayMax
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Great work Nomer. I am currently working on a model to render in max, and seeing your images is inspiring me...your making it look it easy. I hope I find the process as easy as you have been saying.
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@steelers05 said:
Great work Nomer. I am currently working on a model to render in max, and seeing your images is inspiring me...your making it look it easy. I hope I find the process as easy as you have been saying.
i should say, with this process, i am now more keen to produce my output in vraymax since my modelling soft is still SU. as again it has 0 parsing time.
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these are very fantatis!
the lighting is great and meterials are wonderfull!
i like them!
i am only jealous of your ability
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Great images indeed. Only a little question, did you model the wood planks in last two images or is just a texture?
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@alex luu said:
these are very fantatis!
the lighting is great and meterials are wonderfull!
i like them!
i am only jealous of your ability
thanks alex.. now that must be a flattery cause i know your ability...
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@massimo said:
Great images indeed. Only a little question, did you model the wood planks in last two images or is just a texture?
i used bump texture, but i have to do my own bump.
i only higlighted further the groove by painting black. then I applied a suttle gaussian blur to have a softer transition. -
Ok, thanks and congratulations.
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here is a WIP render with a Sketchup Scene model imported directly to Max. the reason i love the workflow between SU and Vray Max could be seen in this WIP. Im SU texturing like this is so efficient. In max i am still having difficulty with UVW unwrapped in order to texture this nicely. therefore by preserving the UVW during import i could preserve 100 PErcent of my texture. and i dont have to use the UVW unwrap. then in Max i could load those high poly trees that i love which su has difficulty to handle.
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later i will apply bump, displacement, specular maps for rain puddles and trees.
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here is the SU scene
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Just great nomer! Great calm compositions (the greek word is "synthesis"), great lighting.
Did you used an pp? I don't see much of it. (lol)
IMO UV mapping is superb if you get used to it. If you want to paint directly to surfaces, then its the only way. Especially in complicated structures. -
@michaliszissiou said:
Just great nomer! Great calm compositions (the greek word is "synthesis"), great lighting.
Did you used an pp? I don't see much of it. (lol)
IMO UV mapping is superb if you get used to it. If you want to paint directly to surfaces, then its the only way. Especially in complicated structures.thanks michael, PP..some has a little bit but some has no even PP.
Painting on surface now with SU7 is possibble also. and you can link SU directly with Photoshop and to see the effect of the texture to the surface. on the other hand you are right that paintign the UNWRAP UV map still one of the best. do you do the same in blender? -
The winner in painting the unwrap UVs is (IMO) zbrush.
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Nomer... this is great to know that you are having success with this. Over on that asgvis thread I had mentioned previously I had started to talk about doing materials in max instead of importing them. I would love to be able to import all of my SU materials like you are, but I worry about all the materials that I use as imports that are unrelated to SU materials. For example, I always use imported glass, chrome, and other materials like that and honestly there is a much larger online library of free "v-ray for max" materials that I would like to use. How do you handle stuff like that? Do you ever import materials in vray for max, or do you always create your own?
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@steelers05 said:
Nomer... this is great to know that you are having success with this. Over on that asgvis thread I had mentioned previously I had started to talk about doing materials in max instead of importing them. I would love to be able to import all of my SU materials like you are, but I worry about all the materials that I use as imports that are unrelated to SU materials. For example, I always use imported glass, chrome, and other materials like that and honestly there is a much larger online library of free "v-ray for max" materials that I would like to use. How do you handle stuff like that? Do you ever import materials in vray for max, or do you always create your own?
you see steeler, i have two option always if i use the SU applied map or not. when you export your texture and preserving texture coordinates. once you link the path then your SU texture are already on the scene.
Open the material editor in max and click the group you wanted to apply vray materials. then a standard material will appear. click the standard material (parent) and change it into either those vray materials that you have downloaded or simply a complete new vray material. of you choose the new vray material dont worry if the whole thing becomes gray. If you want to use the native sketchuop material, you have to click the small box on the diffuse and choose browse from scene. here you can choose the native sketchup material. because you preserved the texture coordinate, you will see that the material will be applied same as you applied it in SU once you applied the material to the object that you already selecterd. .
I know you might want to change this material. with another bitpmap sometimes, due to client requirement ir what. you can still do that by just changing the bitmap.
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ok i will make a tutorial for this render how i approach this.
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- Here is the original sketchup scene. I use the texture from form fonts for these pillows.
On SU I group by materials. all the same materials are on one group.
- export to 3ds file with the attach settings how i export my files
- Here is the original sketchup scene. I use the texture from form fonts for these pillows.
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Awesome exlanation Nomer. I have one more question though, what happens of the scale of a new bitmap is different than the scale of the one you are replacing? How do you work with that? because many times I am asked to change from, for example, one brick to a completely different kind of brick and my original material images are different sizes with different repeats.
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