
We would learn about Vray Lights and its types, various light attributes, V-Ray materials and textures, V-Ray global switches, V-Ray image sampler, V-Ray adaptive subdivision image sampler and V-Ray environment. We will then look at the installation process of Vray and setting the render engine to Vray to get the Vray related options. Further to build the base for the course we would understand the behavior of light in general, all the basic CG lights are explained to get an idea of CG light behavior, a short and quick comparison between natural light source and the CG lights of 3DS max, a short and quick comparison between Artificial light source and the CG lights of 3DS max.

The advantage to use Vray over any other render engine. This course starts with the basics of V-Ray wherein it explains why Vray is used in the different types of industry. The ability to control minute details of sampling allow the user to optimize scenes to degrees that other renderers pale in comparison on. It’s brilliant output is somehow matched by very efficient rendering speeds. It is a render engine that is capable of plugging in to various modeling software’s. Vray is the industry standard for rendering in 3d visualization.

Intel* 64, AMD64 or compatible processor with SSE4.2 support Note: V-Ray is only supported for 64-bit operating systems and 64-bit version of SketchUp.
