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Photorealistic Materials and Textures in Blender Cycles

You're reading from   Photorealistic Materials and Textures in Blender Cycles Create impressive production-ready projects using one of the most powerful rendering engines

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805129639
Length 394 pages
Edition 4th Edition
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Author (1):
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Arijan Belec Arijan Belec
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Arijan Belec
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Materials in Cycles FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Creating Materials in Blender 3. Chapter 2: Introducing Material Nodes 4. Chapter 3: Mapping Images with Nodes 5. Part 2: Understanding Realistic Texturing
6. Chapter 4: Achieving Realism with Texture Maps 7. Chapter 5: Generating Texture Maps with Cycles 8. Chapter 6: Creating Bumpy Surfaces with Displacement Maps 9. Part 3: UV Mapping and Texture Painting
10. Chapter 7: UV-Unwrapping 3D Models for Texturing 11. Chapter 8: Baking Ambient Occlusion Maps 12. Chapter 9: Introducing Texture Painting 13. Chapter 10: Creating Photorealistic Textures on a 3D Model 14. Part 4: Lighting and Rendering
15. Chapter 11: Lighting a Scene in Cycles 16. Chapter 12: Creating Photorealistic Environments with HDRIs 17. Chapter 13: Preparing the Camera for Rendering 18. Chapter 14: Rendering with Cycles 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

What are HDRIs?

HDRIs are special images that contain a higher range of brightness values than regular images. This allows them to capture the lighting of a real-life environment, which makes them ideal to simulate environments in a 3D scene in Blender. An HDRI will create a background in our world and project light into our scene, which allows us to complete our projects with better lighting and backgrounds.

Figure 12.1 shows a simple scene that has an HDRI applied as an environment texture.

Figure 12.1 – A simple scene with an HDRI environment

Figure 12.1 – A simple scene with an HDRI environment

As you can see, the metal sphere looks photorealistic simply because of the lighting and shading cast onto the object from the environment.

Figure 12.2. shows what an HDRI looks like when viewed as a regular image. HDRIs are 360-degree images that can be imported into Blender as a spherical light source.

Figure 12.2 – An HDRI image

Figure 12.2 – An HDRI image

To understand how HDRIs work,...

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