Hey guys, and welcome back to the low poly background class. So now that you're happy with the setup and the lighting setup of your scene, we're just going to go through some rendering techniques. So from here, I'm just going to set up my viewport because we're going to render to viewport, what sorts of backgrounds we're going to go for. So I'm just trying to fill in as much of the background as possible with my viewport, click on render settings go to output. And I'm going to keep my settings as it is thousand by 1000, you can change the changes you want. Here you can change where you're going to save the, the image to to save it as as it is as a PNG.
And you can also have an alpha channel there as well. Also, you'll need ambient occlusion and global illumination. So to select those, those are inside effect there. So click on effect. And then you can click on ambient occlusion or global illumination and add them to the Render Settings. Once you've done that, all you need to do is click on render.
And you can see here, the final render, of how it's going to look like. Typically, once you've, once you've had a look at the render, you can go back, once it's rendered, it's saved. So you can then go back, change your viewport, or change whatever settings that you want, if it's the lighting, if it's the type of, of landscape, or if it's the color, and then go back into settings, change the name, and then render again, and you can have multiple renders of your background. So this one, I'm happy with that it's already been saved so you don't need to go in and save here. And yeah, that's it. So that's it for this class.
In the next lesson. We're going To go through how to take your final render into Photoshop, and how to do a little few tips and tricks into making it look nice. See you guys there.