Her materials cover general 3D design, 3D printing, geometry, interior design, geo-modeling, and more, and future books are in the works. Her website, offers a wide variety of learning materials for all ages, from kids in grade school through design professionals. So if you’re looking for a quick and free way to present your model, give Twilight Render Hobby a try!īonnie Roskes has been writing tutorial-style projects on 3D modeling software, primarily SketchUp, since 2001. If there’s a way to change it to real-time, I didn’t find it. Some might consider this is a negative, I like the idea that you can start a render and then continue to work on your model. But the window can be minimized or moved into a corner, where it remains running in the background.Īlso, it’s also not a “real-time” render if you orbit around or change the SketchUp window, the render keeps going as before. The only downside I can see with Twilight Hobby is that it sits in front of the SketchUp window and can’t be minimized. In fact I can’t tell a difference at all…. It looks great to my untrained eye, not so different from the three-minute version. I waited an hour, and the rendering had reached pass #. With each pass the rendering gets tighter, but I’m not waiting till all 10,000 are completed. I thought I’d then try a higher-level render, using preset #9: “Interior Progressive.” It starts out at a finer level of detail than the previous render:Īnd according to the progress counter at the bottom of the window, the app runs some 10,000 (!) passes. Since the fast render was so fast, it wasn’t much effort to play with shadows and try again. Adjusting the level of light and dark makes a big difference. The shadows are set according to the time of year and day set in SketchUp’s Shadows window. It’s really fun to watch – here’s how things looked after 30 seconds and the first pass through:īut the rendering was complete after only about three minutes, with no effort by me whatsoever. The rendering starts when you click the green “Play” icon at the top left. For a first try I went with option number 7: “High+” which sounds better than just plain “High.” You can also choose from the scenes and layers available in your SketchUp model. At the top of the render window you can set the image size, and choose from several preset rendering settings. So I went straight to Extensions / Twilight Render / Render. All of these are worth looking into, but I wanted quick and easy. When you choose Extensions / Twilight Render, there are several options, including lights, materials, environments, etc. Here’s the SketchUp cafe model I’m testing this on (look familiar?): Once installed, Twilight Render is found in the Extensions menu. ( See our post on SketchUcation, which explains how to install an RBZ.) On the Mac, you get an RBZ file, which you have to install via SketchUp. On the PC, the downloaded EXE file installs directly into SketchUp as an extension. This week I thought I’d try out Twilight Render‘s free version, called Hobby. And Kerkythea is a popular free engine – also not supported but it still works. But that app hasn’t been supported since SketchUp 2015. Without getting too much into material mapping, shadows, defining lights, etc.įor many of the renderings on this blog, I used to use Visualizer – it was fast and easy. Hey, did you know that this our 100th post?
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