Vray Render Settings For | Sketchup [exclusive]
To get high-quality V-Ray renders in SketchUp, you need to balance speed during the preview phase with precision for the final output. Here are the essential settings and workflow adjustments based on Chaos Group's recommendations and professional practices. 1. Initial Setup and Previews
Basic V-Ray Render Settings
Common fixes for typical issues
- Grainy interiors: raise Light Cache & Brute Force subdivs, enable denoiser, increase max subdivs, add portals at windows.
- Burnt highlights: use Reinhard color mapping or lower exposure; enable highlight compression.
- Slow renders: reduce GI quality, use proxies, simplify materials, lower light subdivs, switch to GPU if supported.
- Banding in sky: increase GI/Light Cache samples and use higher bit-depth output (EXR).
V-Ray Render Settings for SketchUp — Quick Guide
Getting clean, realistic renders from V-Ray for SketchUp comes down to balancing quality, speed, and noise control. Use this compact, practical setup as a starting point for architectural interior and exterior scenes; adjust values to suit scene complexity and hardware. vray render settings for sketchup
How to use: Turn the denoiser ON before you render. You don't need to render until the noise limit is 0.001 anymore. Render to 0.03 Noise Limit, then run the Denoiser. It will look like a 0.008 render. To get high-quality V-Ray renders in SketchUp, you