Love it! The grain also adds character to it. ![]()
Thanks, Bart ! ![]()
Thank you ! Adding grain can be a dilemma sometimes ![]()
Hi @purbosky , yes. Thank you for sharing. I didn’t know you could add external rendering engines to blender
. I’ll research on it. Thanks for the information. I’ll keep learning.
Keep up the great designs.
Workbench is not an external render engine, is already included:
Properties > Render tab > Render Engine drop down menu
Oh, ![]()
Sorry. Mistake.
Thanks for the correction.
“Well, if you want to get technical about it, you can ‘export’ information from Blender into many external render engines …”
I really like the way that you used a line-art overlay to give the feel of "three-dimensional line art." This is a marvelously-detailed and executed scene. And, a nice exhibit of Workbench.
No problem, sorry for being not too clear, hahah. Thanks @BG_Division for additional info.
The setting is actualy similar with the one on the Viewport Shading setting on your 3D viewport (on the header bar, can be at top or bottom of the viewport, depending on your setting).

You can also alternately use menu Viewport > Viewport Render Image (still on the header bar), which will use the settings in the viewport shading mentioned above instead of the render settings (though both aren’t connected to each other btw).

P.S. If this proves to be too confusing, just use the settings on the previous post. ![]()
Somehow it reminded me of the internal renderer, good ole times, lol.
Thank you! The lineart wasn’t is the initial idea though, but I then thought to try to imitate some retro images/illustration to better suit the theme and hence the lines (and the color/tone and grain).
This is incredible!!!
Beautiful work. Very inspiring!
Thanks a lot ! ![]()
Thank you ! Also welcome back to the site ![]()
I enjoy watching this art a lot!
![]()
Glad to hear that ! I enjoyed making this too ![]()
You’re on the featured row! ![]()
Thanks a lot, Bart ! ![]()
Another way to do this is to go to the View menu-Viewport Render Image.
Congratulations, this work was a winner in the Best of Blender Artists 2024 award in the NPR category!
