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Vray Exterior Daylight Tutorial

1) The document discusses setting up a lighting rig in 3ds Max using Vray for an exterior daylight scene. It covers enabling the linear workflow, creating a Vray physical camera and Vray sun light source, and adjusting parameters like turbidity, size multiplier, and intensity. 2) Parameters of the Vray camera like F-number, shutter speed, and film speed are described for controlling the lighting and atmosphere, with starting settings of F7, 120, and 100 typically used. 3) An image based lighting tutorial will follow to continue the exterior lighting setup.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
637 views

Vray Exterior Daylight Tutorial

1) The document discusses setting up a lighting rig in 3ds Max using Vray for an exterior daylight scene. It covers enabling the linear workflow, creating a Vray physical camera and Vray sun light source, and adjusting parameters like turbidity, size multiplier, and intensity. 2) Parameters of the Vray camera like F-number, shutter speed, and film speed are described for controlling the lighting and atmosphere, with starting settings of F7, 120, and 100 typically used. 3) An image based lighting tutorial will follow to continue the exterior lighting setup.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Vray exterior daylight tutorial

In this tutorial I will go through a simple, yet effective way to setup a lighting rig using 3ds max and vray.

Before we begin we need to setup the lwf. Go to Customize, Preferences and click the gamma and lut tab. Check Enable gamma /lut correction, type 2.2 in the field next to Gamma. Under Materials and Colors check both Affect Color Selectors and Affect Material Editor.

Dont forget that for every texture that you use you need to override its gamma like in the screenshot bellow:

If you need a more in depth explanation regarding linear workflow, check out my lwf tutorial that I have posted some time ago. However, the steps above pretty much cover the essential. 1) Click the create button and select cameras. From the drop down menu select vray and click on vray physical camera. You can now create and place the camera wherever you want in the scene. 2) Now we will create the sun. Click again on create and choose lights. Again, from the drop down menu select vray and click on Vray sun. You can now place the sun and its target in your scene. When you will be asked if you would like to automatically add a Vray Sky environment map, click yes. The position of the sun source is directly related to the time of the day. Bellow are 2 examples of renderings with different sun positions (while keeping the rest of the settings identical).

VraySun parameters 1) -turbidity This parameter affects the color of the sky and overall atmosphere in a way the dust affects atmosphere. A higher turbidity value simulates a larger amount of dust and makes the rendering look more yellowish. See examples bellow:

2) -ozone ranges from 0 to 1. Lower values are supposed to make the sunlight look more orange, while higher values should make it bluish. I always prefer to leave this as default. 3) -vray sun size multiplier a value of 0 produces very sharp shadows, while higher values makes them softer.

4) -shadow subdivisions if you are using a higher value for the vray sun size you will need to increase the shadow subdivisions as well, otherwise the samples will be visible. 5) -Intensity multiplier needless to say that higher values results in higher sunlight intensity Having this said, the settings that I usually use for creating a day rendering are: -intensity 1 -turbidity 4 -size multiplier 5 -shadow subdivisions 9 If you dont like the vray physical camera, you can use a standard one as well, but you need to decrease the intensity to somewhere around 0.01

Bellow is a rendering that was done using the settings above.

As you can see, at the moment it looks a bit dark and washed out. You can either play with the curve in vray virtual frame buffer, or start tweaking the vray camera settings. Vray camera parameters I always prefer to further adjust the image from the vray camera parameters. There are 3 main parameters that affect the lighting/atmosphere: F-number, shutter speed, and film speed. 1) F-number This parameter determines the width of the camera aperture and therefore it affects exposure. Higher values produce darker images, while lower values brightens the images

2)Shutter speed This parameter determines the amount of time the film is exposed to the light. It is calculated in

inverse seconds therefore higher values produce darker images.

3) Film speed This parameter determines how sensitive the film is to the light. Higher values produce lighter images, but the downside is that the higher the sensibility the more grainy the image will look. For daylight exterior renderings it is recommended to keep this at 100. There are several other parameters that you can touch (like custom white balance, vignetting, etc) but you can have more control if you do this in photoshop.

In conclusion, even though there are no universal settings for the vray camera, whenever I do an exterior daylight rendering I start with the following settings, and depending on the scene I may need to tweak them a little further. F-number 7 Shutter speed 120 Film speed 100 Rest of the parameters default. Bellow is the rendering done using these parameters.

In the next part of this tutorial we will talk about image based lighting, so stay tuned.

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