Indigo Renderer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indigo Renderer
GermanCountryRoad by David Gudelius.jpg
A photorealistic image rendered with Indigo
Developer(s)
Stable release4.2 (December 6, 2019; 2 years ago (2019-12-06))
Operating systemLinux, macOS and Windows
TypeRendering system
LicenseProprietary commercial software
Websiteindigorenderer.com
A render demonstrating Indigo's realistic light simulation

Indigo Renderer is a 3D rendering software that uses unbiased rendering technologies to create photo-realistic images. In doing so, it uses equations that simulate the behaviour of light. By simulating the interactions of light, it can produce effects such as:

  • Depth of field, as when a camera is focused on one object and the background is blurred
  • Spectral effects, as when a beam of light goes through a prism and a rainbow of colours is produced
  • Refraction, as when light enters a pool of water and the objects in the pool seem to be "bent"
  • Reflections, from subtle reflections on a polished concrete floor to the pure reflection of a silvered mirror
  • Caustics, as in light that has been focused through a magnifying glass and has made a pattern of brightness on a surface

It uses methods such as Metropolis light transport (MLT), spectral light calculus, and virtual camera model. Scene data is stored in XML or IGS format.

It features Monte-Carlo path tracing, bidirectional path tracing and MLT on top of bidirectional path tracing, distributed render capabilities, and progressive rendering (image gradually becomes less noisy as rendering progresses). It also supports subsurface scattering and has its own image format (.igi).

It was originally released as freeware until the 2.0 release, when it became a commercial product. The Indigo 3 series introduced features such as realtime editing capabilities, while version 4 of the software adds pure GPU rendering through a vendor neutral OpenCL path tracing engine. [1][2]

References[]

  1. ^ "Indigo 2.0.0 betas are available!". Indigo Renderer Forum. 20 April 2009. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
  2. ^ "Indigo Renderer 4 public beta". Indigo Renderer Forum. 7 April 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2016.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""