Once it’s processed, click the camera icon to export. Click the lock icon at the bottom to prepare an image. Visualizer’s controls are practical and simple. The Visualizer team hasn’t built a rendering engine here they’ve built, well, a visualization tool. We’re not talking about jaw-dropping renderings that take four hours to process in a server farm. You’ll notice right away that Visualizer makes it one-click simple to create slick photorealistic images. (Incidentally, Visualizer costs $19.99 and starts with a 7-day free trial, so in a few clicks you can download it and see for yourself). For me, it was a new - and for sure, fun - experience to tune into this instant feedback. The first time you activate Visualizer, it feels a bit like turning on a photographic assistant inside SketchUp - someone following your modeling work, quickly re-painting your sketches into polished scenes… while you’re orbiting and sketching. I’ve been playing around with Visualizer since 3D Basecamp 2014, so this post is a collection of my impressions to date, and a few tips I’ve picked up on. You know, delicious stuff like this:ģD Warehouse model of the Sydney Opera House, processed in about 60 seconds with Visualizer They also fit pretty well for Visualizer, an extension that provides instant photographic previews of SketchUp models and exports fast, clean photoreal images. Simple, fast, fun: three adjectives we often use to describe SketchUp.
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