Be sure to check out www.C4Depot.com for other great tools and products
C4Depot
In this video I will walk you through the basic steps on how to build a displaced & animated body of water with in Cinema 4d, & then to save you time and effort, I will show you a powerful tool call "Infinite Ocean" which features infinite, realistic, displaced ocean water, with customizable waves to enable work outside the limitations of water in Cinema 4d. the tool is available here: c4depot.com/c4d-plugins/infinite-ocean
Be sure to check out www.C4Depot.com for other great tools and products
Be sure to check out www.C4Depot.com for other great tools and products
updated 11 years ago
Be sure to check out www.C4Depot.com for other great tools and products
Available for download at:
c4depot.com
• Concrete Train Tunnel
• Rock Train Tunnel
• Fire Tunnel
• Data Tunnel
• Cloud Tunnel (2)
• Time Tunnel
• Star Tunnel
• Procedural Background Tunnels
c4depot.com/looping-sci-fi-space-tunnel
The model is extremely detailed and UV mapped by Creative Armada studios.
The plane is rigged with an Xpresso control panel and comes with firing machine gun, advertising banner with editable type and pilot with flapping neck scarf.
The airfield is a complete landscape with trees and authentic WW1 hangers.
This is a perfect model for any advertising clip where a flying banner can be used.
This model can be purchased online at c4depot.com
c4depot.com/supervette
Visit www.c4depot.com for more info.
See www.c4depot.com for more information
Featuring C4Depot products for Cinema 4d r15+:
“Fara” the Great White 3D Shark Model:
http://c4depot.com/2017/12/27/fara-great-white-shark
Infinite Fathoms 1.1.2:
http://c4depot.com/infinite-fathoms
Maxon - Cinema 4d:
maxon.net/en-us
This amazing model comes with a swim cycle, articulated jaw and gills, plus an expertly UV mapped remora. Fara started her life as a workflow experiment in C4D as a low poly model, sculpted and UV mapped in another application, and back to C4D for rigging and animating.
She is modeled in anatomical correctness from her nose to tail and includes fully modeled nostrils, teeth, spiracles (ears), gills, and reproductive parts.
Her mouth can be moved open or closed and all fins are articulated with or without gravity applied for a fully realistic swim action.
Rig controls are not included because even though more convenient, we find that animators often like to set up their own proprietary control systems that best suit their projects.
The model includes an 8k diffuse texture and normal maps as well as a reflectivity map to help her glisten in all the right places. For out of water shots the map can easily be removed or attenuated for wet or dry skin effects.
The topology is clean with few triangles and this model will work well with realtime applications as well as traditional animation for cinema and compositing.
Both beauty and accuracy were considered greatly so this model should please marine biologists and film producers alike.
This card was made using the Winter Holiday Model Pack from C4Depo.com
http://c4depot.com/winter-holiday-pack-60-high-quality-models-for-cinema-4d
Includes:
Icicle rig
Snowflake emitter
Santa sleigh
Snow cabin
Lanterns with animated candles
Snowman
Cabin interior
Table
Lamp
Book case
Christmas stockings
Fireplace with animated fire
Rifle
Loom rug
Easy Chair
Snow church scene
Street Lamp
Doors with hardware
Snow globe with stylized trees and North pole sign
Dripping icicle rig
Christmas wreath
Townhouse facade with architectural details
Menorah
Adjustable Christmas Light Rig
Church Interior with furnishings
Candle sticks
Bible
Altar & Lecturn
Pews & light fixtures
Five snow covered evergreen trees
3 Bare trees
Holiday Bells with holly
Decorated Christmas tree
8 Wrapped Christmas Gifts
Santa Sleigh
Christmas Wreath
Snowflake Editor
Works nativly in r19 just check Enable "Spherical Camera"
For release r15-r18 you may need plugin or tool (see below).
Paid plugins:
1. CV-VR Cam (Requires Membership to Cineversity) $$: maxon.net/en/news/maxon-news/article/cineversity-releases-new-cv-vr-cam-plug-in-and-tutorials-to-streamline-cinema-4d-workflow-for-virtua
2. blendy360cam 2.0: http://blendy360cam.com
Free Solutions:
1. youtube.com/watch?v=MzG6Qhj82fU
2. youtube.com/watch?v=nEXGx3-x7ZM
How to upload your 360/VR Content to youtube:
support.google.com/youtube/answer/6178631?hl=en
Visit us & see more at C4Depot.com
EZ Cloud 1.3 is the latest and best volumetric cloud generator for Cinema 4D. Packed with value, this product is the “bomb” for creating animated, morphing clouds in Cinema 4D
EZ Cloud 1.2 is out and jammed full of new features”, including:
Morphing and moving clouds
2 Volumetric cloud system rigs
Infinite, photographic cloud plane
2 animatable, procedural noise cloud planes
Cloud Tunnel rig
Tornado rig with scene file
HDRI Clear Sky for all EZ Cloud scenes
“Twister” asset exploder to destroy your models with the tornado
Farm house, barn, fence & silo to destroy with tornado
Fly-over cloud rig with morphing clouds
Volumetric Ground fog
Biplane 3D model
Hot air balloon 3D model
Zeppelin 3D model
Cloud presets
Rainbow
Visit the EZ Cloud page
Easy Cloud v1.3: http://c4depot.com/2017/08/01/ez-cloud-1-3-3d-volumetric-cloud-generator-for-cinema-4d
• Morphing and moving clouds
• 2 Volumetric cloud system rigs
• Infinite, photographic cloud plane
• 2 animatable, procedural noise cloud planes
• Cloud Tunnel rig
• Tornado rig with scene file
• "Twister" asset exploder
• Farm house and barn to destroy with tornado
• Fly-over cloud rig with morphing clouds
• Ground fog
• Biplane model
• Hot air balloon model
• Zeppelin model
• Rainbow
Plasmafier creates animated plasma effects with six customizable noise presets.
Available for download at C4Depot.com
Infinite Arctic v1.1 new content!
This requires a different workflow using an infinite light. This tutorial walks you through blending volumetric clouds with an HDRI background image.
• Dual Cloud Layers
• 3D Tornado & Scene File with Farm Buildings
• "Twister" asset exploder for Tornado
• Nine Cloud Presets
• Hot Air Balloon 3D Model
• Zeppelin 3D Model
• Biplane 3D Model
• Rainbow 3D Object
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
Achieving extreme realism in your 3D scenes requires realistic lighting, shadows, reflections and refractions. Using HDRI images instead of jpeg background images and lights has the advantage of a faster and simpler workflow while delivering spectacularly realistic renders. Achieving professional renders is as easy as dropping an HDRI image onto a sky object and hitting render.
A sky panorama using 32 bit HDR format brings out lifelike reflections and refraction in the glass, while the 8 bit jpeg images looks flat and dull by comparison
In photography, High Dynamic Range Images are typically created by compositing multiple exposures to capture and bring out information in the extreme shadows and highlights of a photograph. These exposures are then tonally mapped using software and merged to create an visually pleasing image.
In 3D, however, the purpose is to make use of the extra the luminance information stored in 32 bit images to bring the same environment that was shot in camera into the 3D environment. While standard jpeg files contain 256 levels of brightness, the information contained in an HDRI image extends into millions of shades of color and luminance.
Thes extra luminance information in HDRI images is sent to the render engine where it is used to create highly realistic reflections, shadows, refractions and specular details on the objects inside the scene when global illumination is turned on in the renderer.
Even without global illumination, HDRI images still bring realistic reflections and refractions that cannot be achieved using an 8 bit jpeg.
Shooting an unobstructed HDRI panorama of the sky is often difficult. C3Depot uses a drone to fly above buildings and trees to produce ultra-high resolution HDRI sky panoramas of over 19,000 pixels with high exposure values. Although preparing a high-resolution, HDRI panorama takes days to create, C4Depot makes a wide variety of sky styles available to maximize your productivity while enhancing the professionalism of your renders. Visit C4Depot.com to see the full range of HDRI panoramas and value packs. Thanks for watching and we’ll see you at Depot.com
http://c4depot.com/46-dramatic-sunrise
Thanks for watching.
Use HDR sky panoramas from C4Depot to light your 3D scene files without any additional lights. Captures the original lighting in the scene that was shot.
This short, 3.5 minute video shows you how to set up a user interface in Cinema 4D using Xpresso.
Comes with four 3D models, including a biplane, hot air balloon, a rainbow and a zeppelin.
Includes multiple presets for various cloud types, including: cumulonimbus, flat, whispy clouds, storm clouds and overcast clouds. Also comes with a single cloud generator for strategic placement.
EZ Cloud is customizable and is arguably the fastest-rendering cloud tool available for Cinema 4D.