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Blender 3D is a popular, open source modeling and animation package. It is used for game design, architectural visualization, character design, animation, and still images. However, creating believable lighting and texturing is difficult in any 3D program.
This step-by-step tutorial aims to familiarize you with Blender's new interface and basic features as well as take a look at what it takes to produce a believable scene using lighting, texturing, compositing, and rendering.
By using the example of a tricycle in an outdoor scene you will learn to establish an effective workflow to increase your productivity. You will also thoroughly studying the scene and deciding how your tricycle would look on a sunny, cloudless day using Blender lamps. Not just that, you will also learn to implement your decisions by applying a 3-point light rig, adjusting the color of the lights, adding shadows, and using light groups to control the lighting. You will learn to add ambient occlusion effects to your scene by using both ray-traced and approximated ambient occlusion algorithms. A mesh example shows you how to give a particular look or "feel" by adding and editing materials. You will light a wine bottle on a table by taking a look at lighting interior spaces and how to create complex light rigs and custom UV textures for your scenes using Blender's UV editing capabilities. You will create a custom UV map, export it as a file type Blender can read, and finally add your UV map to the wine bottle mesh. In the same example you will add wood material to booths. You will further enhance the background by adding wallpaper, giving color and metallic tint to the lamps, and adding material to light bulbs. You will look at lighting techniques used in scenes that include both interior and exterior light sources in a scene that has sunlight traveling in through the window and a light bulb hanging from the ceiling.
A step-by-step guide, with practical examples, that builds up your knowledge of lighting and rendering in Blender and helps you to implement these various techniques in your own work
What you will learn from this book :
Optimize Blender's Internal Renderer for your projects
Establish a well-tested and efficient workflow to constantly produce high-quality work
Apply both ray-traced and approximated ambient occlusion to your scene
Configure the default settings of ambient occlusion by manipulating parameters such as Sampling, Attenuation, and Influence
Configure settings found with Blender's materials to create, duplicate, and add special effects such as transparency and reflections to your materials
Modify World settings to add a gradient effect to the background to create a more interesting render
Separate your scene into layers to light the scene using a complex light rig
Construct a complex light rig and link lights to specific layers
Add indirect lighting and integrate ...
This step-by-step tutorial aims to familiarize you with Blender's new interface and basic features as well as take a look at what it takes to produce a believable scene using lighting, texturing, compositing, and rendering.
By using the example of a tricycle in an outdoor scene you will learn to establish an effective workflow to increase your productivity. You will also thoroughly studying the scene and deciding how your tricycle would look on a sunny, cloudless day using Blender lamps. Not just that, you will also learn to implement your decisions by applying a 3-point light rig, adjusting the color of the lights, adding shadows, and using light groups to control the lighting. You will learn to add ambient occlusion effects to your scene by using both ray-traced and approximated ambient occlusion algorithms. A mesh example shows you how to give a particular look or "feel" by adding and editing materials. You will light a wine bottle on a table by taking a look at lighting interior spaces and how to create complex light rigs and custom UV textures for your scenes using Blender's UV editing capabilities. You will create a custom UV map, export it as a file type Blender can read, and finally add your UV map to the wine bottle mesh. In the same example you will add wood material to booths. You will further enhance the background by adding wallpaper, giving color and metallic tint to the lamps, and adding material to light bulbs. You will look at lighting techniques used in scenes that include both interior and exterior light sources in a scene that has sunlight traveling in through the window and a light bulb hanging from the ceiling.
A step-by-step guide, with practical examples, that builds up your knowledge of lighting and rendering in Blender and helps you to implement these various techniques in your own work
What you will learn from this book :
Optimize Blender's Internal Renderer for your projects
Establish a well-tested and efficient workflow to constantly produce high-quality work
Apply both ray-traced and approximated ambient occlusion to your scene
Configure the default settings of ambient occlusion by manipulating parameters such as Sampling, Attenuation, and Influence
Configure settings found with Blender's materials to create, duplicate, and add special effects such as transparency and reflections to your materials
Modify World settings to add a gradient effect to the background to create a more interesting render
Separate your scene into layers to light the scene using a complex light rig
Construct a complex light rig and link lights to specific layers
Add indirect lighting and integrate ...
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9781847199881
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 234
- Utgivningsdatum: 2010-11-23
- Förlag: PACKT PUBLISHING