

When we look at these renders, we may not notice the light source - and this is where bloom and glare effects come in. Light sources in V-Ray scenes can often appear blown-out, as very white areas and bright pixels. In this article, I’ll guide you through what the lens effects do and how you can tweak them to your liking. After many years of research, and observation and analysis of the real world, these effects take into account the design of a camera lens to perfectly simulate bloom and glare, the naturally occurring aberrations that surround light sources. The Lens Effects tool in the V-Ray Frame Buffer (VFB) can be the difference between a good render and a great one. Expert Ricardo Ortiz explains how they work and how to use them. Materials and other V-Ray data saved with V-Ray older than v2.0 will not be read.The V-Ray Frame Buffer’s bloom and glare Lens Effects are the unsung heroes of great renders. If you need to migrate an outdated scene, you will need to perform a 2-step migration - first one to v3.60.02 and a second one to V-Ray Next. To do so, first visit, enable the Show older versions checkbox and download V-Ray 3.60.02. Then, uninstall V-Ray Next for Rhino and install v3.60.02 instead. Open your outdated project, inspect the scene materials through the V-Ray Asset Editor and save the project. Note that V-Ray is only supported for 64-bit operating systems and 64-bit versions of Rhino.įor additional information on hardware, see the Hardware Recommendations article. V-Ray for Rhinoceros 5 Processor 1st Gen Intel Core or compatible processor with SSE4.2 support (圆4). Operating System Windows 7, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 (64-bit versions only). Supported GPU Maxwell-, Pascal-, Volta- and Turing-based NVIDIA card (s) with latest video driver or recommended version 411.31 For more info, see GPU Rendering.
