Thank you for looking in this thread. My name is AJ DeFlaminis and I teach at the Art Institute of Portland in the Viz and Games departments. Though it took a while, we have made the switch over to Vray for our lighting in the Viz program. I am very excited about this and with the students permission I am posting some of the results of this class. None of them had any previous vray experience. The class was 10 weeks, covering as much as possible in that time period. I wanted to thank Chaosgroup for supplying some of the training files via their marketing program, and I look forward to the work in the future.
All of these renders were printed and mounted to display in the hallways, and our students credit models and textures on the front of those prints. All models and scenes came from either archive3d.net or www.free3dmodelz.com and are for educational use only. I had the students strip out any building textures and lighting from the scene files and had them basically start over using different lights and backgrounds.
It's a pretty aggressive semester, with topics ranging from GI types, color mapping, camera and exposure settings, vray materials a-z, sun and sky, ies, baking AO and rendering layers, HDRI lighting, linear workflow, and more. All images posted are with the permission of the students who did the work.
I hope you like the renders.
All of these renders were printed and mounted to display in the hallways, and our students credit models and textures on the front of those prints. All models and scenes came from either archive3d.net or www.free3dmodelz.com and are for educational use only. I had the students strip out any building textures and lighting from the scene files and had them basically start over using different lights and backgrounds.
It's a pretty aggressive semester, with topics ranging from GI types, color mapping, camera and exposure settings, vray materials a-z, sun and sky, ies, baking AO and rendering layers, HDRI lighting, linear workflow, and more. All images posted are with the permission of the students who did the work.
I hope you like the renders.
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