

This is a quick tip from Jonas Pilz and he explains how to get rid of Artefacts by lowering the Ray Epsilon setting in ProRender, which is under the general tab.

Get Rid of Precision Artefacts in ProRender Rick Barrett from Maxon gives some tips for using ProRender. In this tutorial, EJ Hassenfratz of Eyedesyn goes a bit deeper, going over the basics, including what ProRender is, GPU rendering basics, Physically based lighting and rendering, and how to set up the settings for the best results.ĥ Gotchas to Avoid in Cinema 4D R19 ProRender New in Cinema 4D R19: Release 19 AMD ProRender, OpenCL Based Rendering for Everyoneįirst, a quick overview from Patrick Goski from Maxon. The Radeon Pro website has a tutorial on how to use ProRender in Cinema 4D, which includes hardware specs. It’s now integrated right into Cinema 4D R19, bringing interactive rendering, a PBR workflow, and bucket rendering. Radeon ProRender is a high-quality, fast, accurate, physically-based renderer that is open-source, free, and cross-platform, and can be used with several hosts including 3ds Max, Rhino, Maya, Blender, Solidworks. There are also tutorials on how to avoid problems, how to get rid artefacts, and how to work with large resolutions in ProRender. This page has multiple tutorials that explain how to set up ProRender, GPU rendering basics, Physically based lighting and rendering, and settings for the best results. Here’s everything you need to know to get you started with ProRender.

ProRender, and developed by AMD, and is the new Open CL-based GPU/CPU-based rendering engine, now built right into Cinema 4D R19. You have so many choices in renderers these days and GPU rendering is a favorite lately.
