Book Image

Blender 3D Basics Beginner's Guide Second Edition

By : Gordon Fisher
Book Image

Blender 3D Basics Beginner's Guide Second Edition

By: Gordon Fisher

Overview of this book

This book teaches you how to model a nautical scene, complete with boats and water, and then add materials, lighting, and animation. It demystifies the Blender interface and explains what each tool does so that you will be left with a thorough understanding of 3D. This book starts with an introduction to Blender and some background on the principles of animation, how they are applied to computer animation, and how these principles make animation better. Furthermore, the book helps you advance through various aspects of animation design such as modeling, lighting, camera work, and animation through the Blender interface with the help of several simple projects. Each project will help you practice what you have learned and do more advanced work in all areas.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Blender 3D Basics Beginner's Guide Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
3
Controlling the Lamp, the Camera, and Animating Objects
Index

Time for action – rendering only a part of the frame


It's pretty easy to render only a part of the frame, shown as follows:

  1. Get a camera view in the 3D View window.

  2. Press Shift + B and use the marquee, like the standard border select, to choose a portion of the frame in the camera image area.

  3. Then, press F12 to render it.

  4. To return to rendering the entire window, press Shift + B and select the entire camera image area in the 3D View window. It will not change your camera settings if you select some of the passepartout area; you will just get the full camera image.

What just happened?

You learned to save time by only rendering a part of the frame. We covered earlier in this chapter that Shift + B allowed you to select part of a view to zoom into, using Shift + B in the Camera view lets you select a part of the whole frame to render. You can also use this trick to render animation with the Ctrl + F12 command.

Taking a glimpse of what the animation will look like with the quick render

You also need...