sbsar format, adding to Dimension’s existing support for MDL materials. Other new features include support for procedural materials created in Allegorithmic’s Substance Designer in. Support for Substance materials and real-world scene units, more graphics placement options Adobe hasn’t announced how much credits will cost once the service launches fully. Users get 15 free credits per month while the service is in beta, and renders are also denoised automatically during the beta period. Adobe’s cloud rendering service is credit-based, with renders priced at 1-3 credits each, depending on resolution.
The latest update adds experimental support for cloud rendering from within Dimension. Users can import 3D models created in other software, assign materials, textures and HDRI lighting via a simple drag-and-drop workflow, and render images as layered PSD files for post-processing in Photoshop.Įxperimental support for in-app cloud rendering
Originally codenamed Project Felix before its commercial release in 2017, Dimension CC is intended to enable graphic designers with little experience of 3D tools to incorporate 3D elements in their work. The software’s original V-Ray-based renderer has also been removed in favour of Adobe’s own engine.Ī designer-friendly drag-and-drop 3D rendering and compositing tool The update adds experimental support for cloud rendering from inside Dimension, plus support for Substance materials, new options for texturing 3D objects, and support for real-world scale units. According to Adobe’s online changelog, CC 2.1 is December 2018’s bugfix update, making this Dimension CC 2.2.Īdobe has released Dimension CC 2.2, the latest update to its 3D rendering and compositing software aimed at “graphic designers, not 3D experts”. Updated 17 July 2019: This story originally referred to the release as Dimension CC 2.1.