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                                                                 unDeRstanDing PHoto-RealistiC Visualization    453


                           want to investigate the file or animation, you can download the c11-Visualization-Finished
                           .rvt file or the c11_Visualization_Animation.avi file from the Chapter 11 folder on this
                           book’s website at www.sybex.com/go/masteringrevit2015.

                           Rendering Settings
                 Certification  Now that we have covered the processes to create still camera views and walkthroughs, let’s
                  Objective  discuss some of the settings that are important to understand before you begin to generate
                           photo-realistic renderings. You can access the Rendering dialog box by clicking the teapot icon
                           on the View tab in the ribbon or in the View control bar of a 3D view. Some of these settings are
                           also available from the Rendering Settings dialog box, which is accessed from the Properties
                           palette when you are working with a 3D view. Figure 11.60 shows the Rendering dialog box to
                           the left and the Rendering Settings dialog box to the right.

                 Figure 11.60
                 Rendering dialog
                 box































                           Using Output Settings
                           An important setting in this dialog box is Resolution. It’s easy to spend far too much time
                           creating a rendered view because rendering times increase exponentially when the resolution
                           doubles. Think of it this way: If you’re rendering a view at 150 dots per inch (dpi) and then you
                           render the same view at 300 dpi, the image is now four times larger, not twice as large
                           (1 × 1 = 1 and 2 × 2 = 4). If you were to render the view at 600 dpi, it would be 16 times
                           larger (4 × 4 = 16), and you could reasonably expect the 150 dpi image that rendered in a few
                           minutes to take considerably longer at 600 dpi.










          c11.indd   453                                                                             5/3/2014   11:07:21 AM
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