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SketchUp to Thea – quick render process

Troy Homenchuk, based out of Michigan, runs his own design studio called Inside Out Viz. Troy has a background in
architecture, urbanism and design. His design studio builds 3D digital models, produces renderings, photo
manipulation, and consults with professionals, who want to bring their in-house rendering workflow to the next level.
Here Troy shares with us his workflow on how to get SketchUp models into Thea for a quick render.
For those of you who use SketchUp and want to get serious about producing high quality renderings, I suggest Thea
for SketchUp. There are many good rendering engines that integrate well with SketchUp, but I like the big three –
Maxwell, V-Ray for SketchUp, and Thea. For ease of use, speed, and quality, I find Thea to be my top choice. V-Ray
offers the greatest variety of shaders, and Maxwell has a rich library of pre-made materials. Really, you can’t go
wrong with any of these three. But if you’re interested in getting your SketchUp models into Thea for a quick render,
I’m sharing this little tutorial that takes you through my workflow. It’s not perfect but it works for me. So enjoy and feel
free to ask questions if you have any. The design is by Ethan McMorrow Design and modeled by Robert Scott
Residential Designs.
Step 1
First check the model in Monochrome mode, as all faces must be facing out. By doing this you will be able to see
immediately what your face orientation is like.

Select Monchrome
Step 2
After checking your faces, enable Shadows and adjust your daylight as desired.

Select Shadows

Step 3
Start the Thea Tool window and select your aspect ratio. In this particular case I used SketchUp Window.

Select Aspect Ratio

Step 4
In the Thea Tool window select the Tools tab and Save Thea scene to your computer (you should get a message
saying your scene has been saved successfully).
Save Scene

Step 5
Open Thea Studio and find your saved file and open your scene.

Open Saved File

Step 6
Click on the Interactive Render button in the Active Render toolbar and find Sun in the Tree View (you may have to
scroll down). If your sun is not enabled, the scene will be dark. Refer to step 9 if there is no sun at all.
Step 7
Make sure the correct scene is selected. With the little camera tab under Properties selected (Properties>Current
View Properties), check to see the size (Resolution) you want and that it is correctly entered.

Correct Scene and Size

Step 8
Select the materials you want to edit if you wish (a warning has appeared in my model, some bitmaps are missing, so
click the button on the left for details’)
TIP: If this should happen, you can render regardless, but if you want to recover them, click on the Textures tab
where you see the warning symbols.

They indicate that there are some missing bitmap files. Right click on the symbol.
Then click Missing Bitmaps, and you will get a list of files you need to track down if you wish.

Step 9
In Settings, click on Environment>Sky and make sure you have enabled Physical Sky.
Select Physical Sky

Step 10
Head down to the Biased tab and click on General tab. Under Main>Engine Core select Adaptive (BSD). Then under
Channels tab select the following: Alpha, Object ID, Material ID, AO, Reflection and Refraction.

Settings

Step 11
Under the Render tab select Biased RT and enable Ambient Occlusion.
Step 12
Now look under the Biased GI tab. If you have something that uses caustics (water for example) you can adjust this
under the Caustics tab. Small Estimation Photon number will produce sharper caustics and reduced render time.
Larger numbers do the opposite.

Caustics

Step 13
Next we head to the Dark Room situated between Viewport and Console.
Darkroom

Click on the start button.

Click on Start Button

Step 14
The Start Render window will pop up. This gives you the opportunity to make sure you have the right scene and
resolution. Click the ‘tick’ button to start your render.
Start Render

Raw render output.

Thea Raw Render

Final render after post production.


Final Render

Thanks for reading


Troy Homenchuk
Troy’s website, where you can contact him and see more of his work: IO Viz
New eBook SketchUp to Layout

Matt Donley's 'SketchUp to Layout' is the essential guide to creating construction documents with SketchUp Pro &
Layout. Now updated for SketchUp 2015!!!
Styles

Styles
A clever way to enhance your final presentations is with the use of SketchUp Styles. Styles are collections of display
settings. You can also use Style Builder to create custom non-photorealistic (NPR) Styles for SketchUp. NPR Styles
can make your models appear hand-rendered, super-technical, and everything in between......Read

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7 Responses to “SketchUp to Thea – quick render process”


 Kishah on August 14th, 2013 4:11 pm

Thanks for this great tutorial! Thea seems to be a great tool and I cannot wait to start playing around with it!

 Christine Franck on August 14th, 2013 7:38 pm

Hi Troy, this was impressive to see. Someday I hope I can hire you to render some images of a project!
Best wishes,
Christine Franck

 New Tutorial ‘SketchUp to Thea – quick render process’ :: SketchUp 3D Rendering Tutorials by
SketchUpArtists on September 13th, 2013 11:38 am

[...] Troy Homenchuk [...]

 Mike Jessop on October 4th, 2013 9:14 pm

Great tutorial but how did you get the bushes and trees in the background?

 admin on October 5th, 2013 1:04 pm

@ Mike….I would say they were added using photo editing software such as Photoshop in the post processing stage
of the project, I am sure Troy will chip in on this

 Dan on November 25th, 2013 8:01 pm

Just wondering if the lightening of the items on the post process image was done on photoshop coz they are darker
on raw render?? Cheers

 Roy on May 29th, 2015 2:29 am

Thank you for this although I’m a C4D user i can still apply this. i didn’t find any tutorial like this so thank you very
much.

i’d like to know how did you do on the background like putting those trees and bushes.

best regards,
fr: philippines

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