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Photographic Rendering with V-Ray for SketchUp

You're reading from   Photographic Rendering with V-Ray for SketchUp Turn your 3D modeling into photographic realism with this superb guide for SketchUp users. Through concrete examples, screenshots, and images, you'll learn the practical side to photographic rendering using V-Ray.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849693226
Length 328 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Brian Bradley Brian Bradley
Author Profile Icon Brian Bradley
Brian Bradley
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Photographic Rendering with V-Ray for SketchUp
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Diving Straight into Photographic Rendering FREE CHAPTER 2. Lighting an Interior Daytime Scene 3. Lighting an Interior Nighttime Scene Using IES Lights 4. Lighting an Exterior Daylight Scene 5. Understanding the Principles of Light Behavior 6. Creating Believable Materials 7. Important Materials Theory 8. Composition and Cameras 9. Quality Control 10. Adding Photographic Touches in Post-production Index

How light behaves


The need and desire to understand just what light really is and how it works has been the motivation behind questions and research that have been going on for many centuries now. It wasn't until the late seventeenth century, however, that these questions and the research work they fuelled started to yield results. They brought to the forefront theories and experiments that have since come to form the foundation of our current understanding regarding the nature and workings of light.

In 1690, Dutch mathematician and astronomer Christiaan Huygens put forward the proposal that light was made up of undulating waves that stimulated vision upon reaching the eye. His idea was that light behaved in pretty much the same manner as sound waves, which stimulate hearing upon reaching the ear.

English physicist Sir Isaac Newton, however, had been applying his own thinking to the questions surrounding the workings of light and didn't agree with Huygens. So, Newton proposed a different theory...

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