Initial settings for Design & Visualization with the ART renderer

Overview

Almost identical to the Design & Visualization intial settings, the DesignVIZ.ART intial settings are configured to provide as much rendering performance possible with complex scenes containing image-based and photometric lighting and using the ART renderer. Your application will be directed towards photo realistic rendering of typical architectural and industrial design models.


Rendering

The rendering settings for a physically based lighting setup will already be set.

The ART renderer will be assigned as default for all rendering.

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Layers

All newly created objects will take advantage of the Layers feature.

Newly created lights will get their Renderable flag set to ByLayer, allowing you to exclude lights from the renderer in a group. Ideal for large projects involving many lights in many places.

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Material Editor

The material editor of 3ds Max will default to use the Physical material, dedicated to achieve photorealistic renderings easily.

Materials assigned to an instanced object will propagate to every instances of that object automatically.

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Lights

The Lights will default to Cast Shadows and their shadow generator will default to the Ray-traced Shadows (ART always produces ray-traced shadows)

All created lights will share the same shadows settings as well by using the Global Settings feature.

This will facilitate the management of multiple light sources, allow light going through transparent objects and ensure accurate shadows for linear and area lights rendering.

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Daylight

Daylight assemblies will always default to the mrSun and mrSky. ART uses the environment map to light daylight scenes; light selection is not relevant, and the Daylight is only needed to control the Physical Sky.

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Motion Blur

In order to use Motion Blur with ART, objects should have Object Motion Blur turned on. Image Motion Blur will not work with ART.

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Cloning

Design and visualization projects typically involve a lot of objects repeated within the same scene. For this reason, the default mode for cloning an object will be Instance.

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Select by Name

To make the navigation easier with data imported from DWG files (AutoCAD), the Display Children option of the Select by Name dialog is enabled by default.

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Inverse Kinematics

Manipulating Luminaires built with HD IK chains can sometimes cause "locks" or "jerky" results with with the Max defaults settings.

This is normal in the context of animation: the equation solving is performed between frames and not intended to provide good motion while interactively manipulating a character.

For applications involving Luminaires, we need a high level of interactivity in the viewport and less animation/keyframing support. This setting will make the HDIK solver work better with interactive manipulations.

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Viewport Shading

 

The interactive viewport of 3ds Max is well suited for interactive environments where a few light sources are defined. As a result, the Daylight object and Photometric lights are typically flooding the interactive viewport with bright white color.

To resolve this, it is preferable to set the viewport shading to use what we call Default Lighting as opposed to using the lights from the scene. The Design & Visualization defaults enable that.

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Real-World Texture Coordinates

 

There are two workflows for texture mapping objects, controlled by the "Use Real-World Texture Coordinates" preference. Design visualization projects typically involve textures on a known size, such as an image of bricks. For this reason the default value of this toggle is ON, which means that objects and modifiers which generate texture coordinates scale them to the real-world size of the object. This also turns on the "Use Real-World Scale" option for 2d texture maps in the material editor, which lets you specify the size of 2d texture maps.

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