

This will be a render of an example project for First Build's " Roast Coffee in Your Home Oven" design challenge. I'll take you through the steps of cranking out a basic, solid render and then let you play with all the fun tools that make them sweet! It’s Quick, simple and great results for minimum effort.Rendering Models in Fusion 360 is pretty straight-forward. EXR as well as a transparent version with. You can get on with something else or submit another cloud rendering.įusion 360 will allow you to download. It will tell you it will complete in approx 20 mins but mine came back easily within 5-10 mins.

I chose the 5″ x 7″ 300 dpi final cloud render which consumed 3 credits. You are now ready to send off to the cloud to Render. This will now show the end grain correctly in the model. Once the material appearance is applied if needed you can rotate your material to enable the correct orientation of grain direction. I played around with the Blur value and settled on 0.289 and I used the Photobooth Environment. Fisrt you need to set the focus point which is a small green dot placed where the focus is needed. You can adjust the depth of field to give a blur effect to the back of the image. I’ve used 3D OAK – Semigloss on the light panel as an example.īut I chose 3D OAK – Stained dark semigloss as my final finish. Toggle the drop down arrow on sculpt until you see Render. Once uploaded you can select the model and it will load into the graphics window. Pack and go your Inventor assembly to a temp folder on your desktop and upload all parts and assemblies to Fusion 360. If you haven’t got a copy it’s less than £250 (UK GBP at the time of writing excluding TAX) & you can get a 30 day trial so don’t fret! It’s in the box with all those other programs that make up the Product Design & Manufacturing Collection. What do you do?Ĭasually you start up Fusion 360. Your training is booked for next week, and your boss is screaming for this image today so that’s not going to work. You have Product Design & Manufacturing Collection which includes 3DS Max. But it’s still not cutting it! It’s also going to tie up your workstation and it’s processor for a while.

Of course this is no problem, you can simply save a screenshot from the real time graphics window of Inventor or toggle to the rendering environment of Inventor Studio. Picture this, excuse the pun, the boss needs a high res product rendering of a piece of furniture for a magazine article.
