


This setting is not recommended for Architectural visuals. This can make a scene look lighter than it really is.Īdjusting the Transmission slider increases the amount of light that can pass through thin objects. This is similar to White Mode but allows sun-light to scatter through thin objects. Turning off materials allows easier refinement of the lighting in a view.Īdjusting this slider will emphasise the edges of elements to create a Sketch-up like appearance. From the Ribbon’s Enscape tab > Settings panel, click the Settings button to show the Enscape Settings dialog box.Holding and the mouse button and moving the mouse left or right will adjust the time of day.Holding the mouse button and moving the mouse will keep the viewing point the same but orbit the camera around that point.When in fly mode, will fly directly upwards, will fly directly downwards.Holding the mouse button and moving the mouse will look around keeping the position of the camera the same.The direction the camera is facing will remain the same. Will move the position of the camera in those directions. Note: Use to swap between fly and walk modes. This mode locks the movement to a floor and stops movement through elements such as walls, but will allow movement through doors. This will allow you to fly around the model, walk through elements and general free roaming. There are two main modes that can be activated from the Enscape dialog box from the top right corner:.The view can be controlled like any other 3D view by turning off worksets, using Visibility / Graphic overrides and hiding elements within Revit.Enscape will load as a separate dialog box.If your Enscape license has expired, the tool will still work for rendering but some of the functionality will be removed.From the Ribbon’s Enscape tab > Control panel click the Start.Create a new 3D view of the project either using the camera as a 3D view or using the default 3D view button for an external view of the project.Enscape is a paid integrated real-time render for Revit and can be used for quick renders, lighting studies and fly throughs.
