You can adjust the bar from left to right to select quality levels ranging from Draft, which is very fast and creates a Once you select a regular render, the option for quality will show up.These options only show up if you have a regular render selected. Note that depending on if you have an interactive render or a regular render selected, your quality options might not show up.To do this, go up to the dropdown labeled “Renderer.” Now let’s take a look at the quality settings.
Note that you can make these values smaller for a faster render, and larger for a slower, more detailed render.You can adjust the size of your image by adjusting the values within the image width/height section – note that these values will get locked to a certain Aspect ratio based on whichever ratio you have selected.The safe frame is going to indicate which part of your viewport will be displayed when you run your rendering – it basically shows you which part of your image will get rendered with your currently selected aspect ratio.Within this section, you can adjust the resolution and aspect ratio of your rendering.
Click on the gear to get into your render settings – If you look down, there’s a little arrow for render output.
VRAY RENDER HOW TO
This is a model from a tutorial I did on my other channel, the SketchUp Essentials, teaching you how to use HDRI images for lighting and backgrounds within your models.Īll of the options we’re going to change are located within the settings tab of the Vray asset editor. When you’re working with renderings, you don’t want to do your test renders on super high setting, super high resolution images – the larger your image, and the higher your settings, the longer your rendering is going to take. In this video, I just wanted to give a quick run-through on how to adjust the resolution and size of your renderings in Vray for SketchUp, as well as your quality settings. It accurately calculates the distribution of light as well as the physical properties of any material. In this Vray quick tip video, learn how to adjust the size and quality of your renderings in Vray! V-Ray renders using adaptive ray tracing technology and proprietary scene intelligence to create imagery that is indistinguishable from a photograph.