We will then take a breather at the mid way point to start working with an actual project, texturing up and lighting a Raspberry Pi circuit board. The lessons continue to show you which of Octane's numerous material types you should be using most often, along with how to get the most from the lighting system. Although Octane can use standard C4D lights, cameras and materials, we show you which special Octane tags you should be using and what benefits they will bring. Working with the live view window for instant lighting and material changes, you will no longer have to sit through lengthy 'preparing' or GI caching stages. Starting with the basics of how Octane works, we discuss how rendering in Octane will differ from C4D's built in render engines. For this reason we have assembled what we believe to be the most concise collection of videos to get you up to speed with Otoy's Octane render engine. Nobody wants to sit through the reference manual in video form. The 3D Fluff ethos has always been to make videos which show the features a user will genuinely need, to the duration that they warrant.
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