3ds Max Illustrate

Done for print publication to illustrate the difference between DNA within the nucleus and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which is different from the cell’s DNA.

3ds Max Illustrator Plugin Free Download

Done by request for charity art show 1973: Pro Choice Voice.

It’s definitely OK to export vector images from 3ds Max, but you need to firstly install the vector rendering plugin “Illustrate!” for 3ds Max. After you installed the “Illustrate!” for 3ds Max, it will become a renderer in 3ds Max which can be us. Download illustrate for 3ds max for free. Photo & Graphics tools downloads - Illustrate! By DavidGould and many more programs are available for instant and free download.

5.7 For 3Ds Max 2012 x32bit/x64bit Illustrate! Is the market-leading cel and illustration renderer. This latest version includes a completely new Flash rendering engine that provides many advanced rendering features including shading and support for intersecting objects.

Bones of the hands, done for a front and back keychain.

A one page illustration overview of the Whipple Procedure (pancreaticoduodenectomy). Done for UIC Hospital.

A one page illustration overview of a laparoscopic appendectomy.

Cover of the American Journal of Bioethics January issue, Vol. 18, Issue 1. This is an editorial piece illustrating the idea of fantasy cures in pediatrics.

Medium: Corel Painter

An illustration portraying the Zika virus invading the human body, surrounded by fibroblasts, one of the main cells they invade.

Medium: Corel Painter

Editorial discussing the knowledge young adults and adolescents have about anatomy and their own health.

Medium: Corel Painter

Editorial piece showing the tumor suppressor gene, p53, with three residues highlighted that are often shown to be mutated in breast cancer.

Medium: VMD, 3DS Max, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator

A diagram highlighting the residues that often become mutated in p53 tumor suppressor gene in cases of breast cancer.

Medium: VMD, 3DS Max, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator

A medical legal piece demonstrating the misplacement of a g-tube in the colon, rather than in the stomach.

Medium: Corel Painter and Adobe Illustrator

A guide to three different types of injections.

Medium: Adobe Illustrator

Diagram showing the lifecycle of neutrophils in their journey to a site of infection.

Mediums: 3DS Max, Mudbox, and Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator

3ds Max Illustrator

Diagram depicting the vasculature of the kidneys.

Medium: Corel Painter

Diagram showing the parasympathetic inervation of the salivary glands.

Mediums: Prismacolor pencil, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator

Illustrate! is a non-photorealistic renderer.

3ds Max Illustrates

It allows you to render your 3D scene in a variety of artistic styles. The most common is the cel ortoon style where the objects are rendered with a single or limited number of colors and the edges are drawn with a line. This version of Illustrate! is particularly adept at this style of rendering. It includes a lot of advanced features for creating film resolution cel renderings.

Illustrate! also renders illustrations. Most commonly these are technical illustrations with hidden-lines eliminated. Illustrate! supports a huge variety of line styles so you can create complex illustrations.

One amazing feature of Illustrate! is its ability to render these styles out to vector artwork. It currently supports Shockwave Flash, Adobe Illustrator, and Autocad DXF output. This allows you render your 3D scenes for displaying on the Internet or for inclusion with other vector graphics.

Below are some examples of the many rendering styles that Illustrate! supports...

3ds Max Illustrate

To see more styles visit the Gallery.

3ds max illustrator

History

Illustrate! was first released in 1994(3DS R3 for MS-DOS) and has provided the 'best of class' technology ever since. Over the years many competing companies have since discontinued their renderers while Illustrate! has gone from strength to strength. Illustrate! is often the first to bring you the newest cutting-edge technologies. Amongst Illustrate!'s many 'firsts':

  • 1st cel and illustration renderer for 3DS MAX 4.x, 3DS MAX 3.x., 3DS MAX 1.x, 3DS DOS.
  • 1st vector renderer for 3DS MAX, including the first Shockwave Flash and Adobe Illustrator output.
  • 1st renderer to support reflections and refractions in toon shading.
  • 1st renderer to support vector output of variable line weights.