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An architectural render showing different rendering styles in Blender, including a photorealistic style using Cycles. Blender includes three render engines since version 2.80: EEVEE, Workbench and Cycles. Cycles is a path tracing render engine. It supports rendering through both the CPU and the GPU.
Blender (Blender Foundation) is a free, open source, 3D studio for animation, modeling, rendering, and texturing offering a feature set comparable to commercial 3D animation suites. It is developed under the GPL and is available on all major platforms including Windows, OS X, Linux, BSD , and Solaris .
AVS Video Editor: Yes No No Intel / AMD compatible at 2500 MHz or higher 1 GB 1 GB Blender (VSE : Video Sequence Editor) Yes Yes Yes 2 GHz+ with SSE2 support [25] 2 GB [25] 512 MB [25]? Cinelerra: No No Yes x86-64 compatible processor 256 MB 0.25 GB Cinelerra-GG Infinity: No No Yes x86-64 compatible processor, recommended minimum: 2 GHz, 4 cores
2D/3D toon Animation, Lighting, Modeling, Node based Material Creation / Texturing / 3D Texture Painting/ UV Mapping, Rendering (Internal, External, 3D Anaglyph and VR), 3D Rigging and Animation, Sculpting, Visual 3D Effects, Basic Post-Production Video Editing, Motion Tracking, Python Scripting, Fluid Simulation, Particles, Physics, Compositing
This page provides a list of 3D rendering software, the dedicated engines used for rendering computer-generated imagery. This is not the same as 3D modeling software , which involves the creation of 3D models, for which the software listed below can produce realistically rendered visualisations.
Title License 3D rendering support Actively developed 3D-Coat: Commercial software: Yes: Yes 3D Slash: Freemium: Yes: No 3dvia Shape: Commercial software: No: Yes AC3D: Commercial software
The following is a list of video editing software. The criterion for inclusion in this list is the ability to perform non-linear video editing. Most modern transcoding software supports transcoding a portion of a video clip, which would count as cropping and trimming. However, items in this article have one of the following conditions:
The word "rendering" (in one of its senses) originally meant the task performed by an artist when depicting a real or imaginary thing (the finished artwork is also called a "rendering"). Today, to "render" commonly means to generate an image or video from a precise description (often created by an artist) using a computer program. [1] [2] [3] [4]