Look Dev

Look Dev

  1. Light Presets: Select one of the ten different light presets to use for your scene. Head and Full Body presets offer varied lighting and camera setups to achieve different visual effects for the model in focus.
    Head Light Presets

    Rendered with Autodesk Arnold.

    Rendered with Chaos V-ray.

  2. Full Body Light Presets

    Rendered with Autodesk Arnold.

    Rendered with Chaos V-ray.

  3. Remove Light Preset: Remove the current light presets being used in the scene.
  4. The Grey Ball, the Chrome Ball, and the Macbeth Chart: Click the image to add a chart with 24 color squares, a gray material ball, and a chrome material ball into the scene.
  5. The Macbeth chart helps ensure colors in your 3D scene are accurate and consistent across projects

    The gray and chrome balls serve as lighting and reflection references for the scene, aiding in adjusting lighting, reflections, and shading settings in the 3D scene to match real-world lighting conditions.

  6. Remove Macbeth: Remove the Macbeth chart and the material balls within the scene.
  7. Adjust the colors in your scene to achieve stylistic or natural lighting effects.

HDR

  1. HDR: Click the preview area to access the drop-down menu containing 5 embedded HDR options. Select one for the background image and one for environment lighting. You can also click the import icon to add a custom HDR image.

  2. Rot. Offset: Click and drag the cursor to horizontally rotate the HDR map.

  3. Strength: Use the slider to adjust the HDR intensity. Higher values increase the strength of HDR color and lighting effects on the environment.
  4. Global Exposure: Enable this section to adjust the scene’s exposure value and the light’s color value.
  5. Exposure Value: Controls the overall brightness of your rendered scene.

    Exposure Value = 7.900

    Exposure Value = 11.800

  6. White Balance: Adjust the colors in your scene to make them look natural and accurate under various lighting conditions.
  7. Illuminant: List of different lighting temperature presets.
  8. Temperature: Adjusts the light temperature in the scene. The lower the temperature (in Kelvins), the warmer the light color, and vice versa.
  9. Custom: Use the color swatch to choose the light color you want to apply to the scene.