Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Here are some other sites with Vray tutorials that I find useful:
www.chaosgroup.com/support (you will have to register) click on "V-ray docs" and open the Help
Index.
www.aversis.be
www.vray.info
www.evermotion.org
VRAY Forums
1. Exterior Lighting
2. Environment Adjustments
3. Night Scene
5. Color Bleeding
6. VRAY Toon
7. Interior Lighting
8. HDRI Lighting
1. Exterior Lighting
2. Environment Adjustmnets
Here is an example of what can happen to a scene if the environment is too high. As you can see
the entire image looks blown out and oversaturated.
Note: The "blown out" effect is also due to the Target direct Light in the scene. In combination with
lights, high GI Environment multipliers can cause unwanted results. By contrast it is possible to light
a scene using only the GI Environment.
2.1 Increase the GI Environment Multiplier to 1.0 and turn off the Target Direct Light (Direct01)
As you can see this approach produces shadows that are very soft and undefined. This method may
work for you depending on the look you are after. You can add a bitmap to the GI Environment by
clicking "None" and browsing to a bitmap of you choice. (Adding a bitmap to the GI environment is
similar but but the same as HDRI lighting which we will cover later on)
3. Night Scene
Even on the darkest nights in the middle of nowhere there will always be some sort of "ambient light"
(varying degrees of course). Light from the stars, moon, or like in many night scenes, light from
surrounding buildings and gereral "civlilization" can create enough ambient light to see an
object...even if the object has no light source of its own. (All of this depends on the scene you are
rendering) A good way to get this general ambient light is to use the GI environment.
3.1 Set you GI Environment to .4 and pick a similar color to the one below.
3.2 Make sure the light Direct01 is off and then select and turn on the light "Inside Omni". This light
simply provides some interior lighting so its not so dark.
3.3 Render the scene and you should get something similar to the image above.
The VRAY light material allows you to create a light out of any piece of geometry. I applied a VRAY
light material to the sphere on top of the structure.
4.1 Open the Material Editor (M), click on an empty material slot and click the top right button that
says "Standard". (If the button says VRayMtl then you didn't select an emty slot)
4.2 When the Material/Map browser opens select VRayLightMtl near the bottom of the list as shown
below:
Back in the Material editor you can adjust the settings of your Vray Light material. Play with the color
and multiplier to get the desired results.
Aslo you can use a standard MAX material with self illumination to produce geometric lights. See
Example below.
The curving tube has a rainbow bitmap in the map slot under self illumination. The material is a
standard MAX material.
5. Color Bleeding
5.1 Turn off the light "Inside Omni" and turn on the Light "Direct01".
5.2 Under VRay Environment, adjust the GI Environment as we had it before when we made the
direct sunlight renders. Give the multiplier a value of .3 and adjust the color back to a light yellow.
5.3 Select the sphere on the top of the structure and assign the "Yellow1" material to it.
5.4 Render the Scene and you should get a result similar to the image below:
Roll over the image to see the effects of color bleeding. Light is bouncing off the sphere and onto
the surrounding objects. Though this effect does happen in the real world, I often see it over
exaggerated in renderings. You can desaturate your materials (or their corresponding bitmaps) to
lessen this effect.
6. VRAY Toon
6.1 From the top menu click Rendering then click environment (Or just press "8") This brings up the
Environment and Effects Dialog box.
6.2 Under the Atmosphere rollout click the "Add" button. Select VRay Toon from the list that
appears.
6.3 Scroll down a bit in the Environment and Effects Dialog box to see the VRay Toon settings and
change the line from pixels to world by clicking on the "World" radio button. Give the line thickness a
world value of 6" as shown above.
6.4 Render the scene. You should get a similar result to the image below:
Note: You can modify the color and thickness of the line to get desired results. Also you can use a
custom bitmap in the color slot of the line if you prefer.
7. Interior Lighting
7.1 Switch to Camera02 and make sure the light "Inside Omni" is turned off.
7.2 Press "8" to open the Environment and Effects dialog box. Under the Atmosphere rollout select
VRay Toon from the Effects list. With VRay Toon selected click the delete button. For this example
of interior lighting we want the VRAY Toon effect turned off.
7.3 Select Pane01, right-click in the viewport and select VRay properties:
7.4 With the VRAY Properties box open check "Matte object" in the top right. Under Direct Light
check shadows. The Matte object makes the plane invisible but it will still render the shadows and
reflections. (Useful for studio lighting setups) We did this so that the ground plane wont show up in
the interior render. (Also to explain Vray object properties) There are many useful settings in the
VRay object properties box...their labels are self explanitory.
7.5 Render the scene. It should look like the image below:
It is obviously to dark. As cool as VRAY is, most of the time it needs some help lighting interior
scenes. In other words, a Direct light alone isn't enough. This is where the VRay Lights at the
windows come in. Notice they are positioned right outside of the window (adjust the positioning to fit
your specific needs) and are the same shape as the window
7.6 Select VRayLight01 and click the modify tab on the control panel
7.7 Turn on VRayLight01 by clicking the checkbox under the Parameters rollout. The other five
VRAY lights in the scene are instances of Light01 and should turn on as well. Make sure "Invisible"
is checked. If it isn't, the light from Direct01 won't be able to pass through the VRay Lights.
7.8 With the lights on, render the scene. You should get a result similar to the image below:
The image looks somewhat grainy with the default VRay Light settings. To correct this we can
change some settings in the VRay QMC Sampler rollout.
7.9 Open the Render Scene dialog box if it isn't open already. (press F10)
7.10 Click the Renderer tab and scroll down to the "VRay QMC Sampler" rollout and expand it if it
isn't alread open.
Notice how the adjustments we made reduced the graininess to a more tolerable level. However, the
render time has doubled. You'll have to toggle the settings in the QMC Sampler until you reach a
level that optimizes quiality and Speed. This is easier said than done and of course it varies from
scene to scene.
Comparison of settings. The yellow arrows show the dividing line of the same scene with the
different settings.
8. HDRI Lighting
The HDRI file used in this tutorial was created by Aversis. Visit www.aversis.be for more
tutorials on HDRI lighting and many other VRAY topics.
8.1 Switch to Camera03 and unhide the following objects: Bowl, Glass, Teapot, Torus Knot and
Water.
8.2 Render the scene. You should get something similar to the image below.
8.3 Press "M" to open the Material Editor. Click on theVRay HDRI material in the top right.
Note: To load a VRay HDRI file select an empty material slot and click the blue "Get Material"
button which is highlighted in yellow above. When the Material/Map Browser opens, select
VRayHDRI from the list...highlighted in yellow below.
8.4 Drag the HDRI material from the material editor into both environment slots located in the VRay
Environment rollout of the render scene dialog box.
8.5 Before we render the scene we need to turn off the light Direct01 and make sure that the GI
Environment multiplier is set to 1 (highlighted in yellow above) . Since the only thing lighting the
scene will be the HDRI light, the GI Environment multiplier needs to be higher. Note: You can, for
example, use a direct light (sunlight) in conjunction with HDRI lighting. But, its a good idea to have
one more powerful than the other to avoid burnt out images (see section 2) Make sure your HDRI
parameters are the same as the image above. (play with the settings later)
8.6 Render the scene. Your results should be similar to the image below.
The shadows are much softer and undefined. The look is similar to straight environment lighting
described in section 2. However, there are subtle differences. Don't think that HDRI lighting only
produces soft shadows. If many cases it does, but that's because the majority of shadows in the real
world have soft edges and HDRI intends to accurately recreate real world lighting conditions.
This is what the HDRI file we are using looks like. This is the image that is lighting our scene. The
soft shadows in the scene are produced because of the Real World soft shadows captured in the
HDRI file.
9. Material Settings
9.1 Give the Green, Red and Yellow1 materials a light grey color in the reflection slot. You can copy
the color by right clicking the color and pasting it into the reflection slots of the other materials. See
image below.
9.2 Render the scene. Your results should be similar to the image above.
Note: I used the turbulance noise preset but use what you think will work best for your situation. You
can animate the bump amount to create a ripple effect in animations.
Change the settings for the red, green and yellow materials to match the following. (Leave the
diffuse colors alone)
Frosted Glass:
The refraction glossies has been lowered to.95. I find this to be a little counter intuitive, but to
increase glossieness you have to lower the spinner.
Note the increase in render time. For animations you might want to find another way to achieve this
effect. Remember we are still using Basic render settings. Our custom Irradiance Map (IR
Map) is setup for quick rendering. Higher quality IR maps will and higher output resolutions
will significantly increase render times. That being said I have managed to render animations
with moving objects using these "low" custom IR map settings without any noticable "flickering"
The flickering problem....well thats a whole other tutorial in itself.
Remember that the white areas get extrude the most and the black areas extruded the least. Keep
that in mind otherwise you may get unwanted results. I spent some time in Photoshop making
certian ares pure white or pure black in order to aviod "spikes" in the displaced geometry.
To Apply:
1. Select the object you want to apply the VRay Displacement to.
2. Apply a Mesh Smooth Modifer to the object and set the iterations to zero.
In the common params, highlighted in yellow, there is a button to add a bitmap for displacement.
This is where I added the black and white stone image seen above.