Revit Materials 101: Relinking Images and Transferring Revit Materials

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 13 ม.ค. 2020
  • Having trouble with Revit Materials? Are images not showing up, or your materials gray in realistic mode? This BIMsmith Revit tutorial will address common issues with linking and transferring Revit materials in Revit projects.
    Related: "Revit Materials 101: Intro to Revit Material Libraries": blog.bimsmith.com/Download-Re...
    -- Video Synopsis --
    A Revit material is a combination of identity data, graphic representation data and an appearance asset at a minimum. It can also contain physical and thermal information for some of Revit’s advanced analysis features, but that’s a topic for another video. The appearance asset controls how the material will look in realistic mode and when the material is rendered and can be made in a couple different ways. One option is to use a specialty asset like metal or paint and simply assign an RGB color code. Another option is to use an image or images for a custom material.
    However, to save on file size, those images are not imported into the Revit project. By default, Revit has a large library of textures on your local computer that it will use for the out of the box Revit materials. Occasionally, we will tweak these to create the look of a manufacturer’s material, but most of our materials use custom images created from actual product photography, and these custom images are provided in a download along with the Revit project.
    When you download a product from Market or Forge that contains custom images, your download is a zip file with the Revit project and with all the images you need to make the materials work. However, we often get support tickets from architects who open those Revit projects and have materials that don’t re-link and appear gray in realistic mode and have errors in the material manager. The best way to make these materials work is to set up a rendering location folder for Revit.
    Rendering locations are folders on your local computer or your network server that you tell Revit to look in to relink any images. If you’re working on your local computer, we suggest creating a folder under Documents called "BIMsmith" and copy and paste all the images you download from Market and Forge here - this is how the BIMsmith Plugin works.
    If you work on a network, with other people, you should set up a folder in a common location that everyone can access. This way, when your coworker opens a project and adds materials, your Revit can look in the right place for the custom images. For this to work, you’ll need to do the following steps on all your networked computers.
    To add a rendering to Revit go to File then and click on “options” at the bottom, then select the "Rendering" tab on the side. Now copy and paste the location of the folder that you created in the previous step and Revit will look there for images. Now when you download something from Market and Forge, first copy the images to your folder, then open the Revit file and the images will automatically load.
    ...
    Watch the FULL video to learn the full process for linking Revit materials, or download Revit Materials for free at market.bimsmith.com/revit-mat....
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ความคิดเห็น • 14

  • @ludohugo1
    @ludohugo1 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Brilliant tutorial, (quick, straight to the point) awesome ! A Big THANK YOU !

  • @slumptxjr2589
    @slumptxjr2589 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video is so under appreciated....awesome video really helpful!

  • @TheBesLife
    @TheBesLife 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Your title is Revit Materials 101 but the speed and and assumption that everyone watching this video has an advance understanding of materials is not always the case. I believe what you have is good and where I need to be it's just a little above my level.

    • @BIMsmith
      @BIMsmith  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Kirk - we appreciate the feedback. Perhaps "102" would be a better title! If you haven't seen it already, this other video about .ADSKLIB material libraries is maybe a bit more introductory: th-cam.com/video/uXQwHC8B11g/w-d-xo.html

    • @TheBesLife
      @TheBesLife 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@BIMsmith I would like to spend some time with you because I believe you could get in the right direction. I am trying to put a 6" x 20" piece of ceramic on a wall. I have gone into the manufacturer's web site and downloaded the jpeg, resized in Photoshop and brought back over into Revit. I what to offset them like a wood floor but having trouble making it work. Any suggestions

  • @teomicu7493
    @teomicu7493 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video! Much appreciated, please create more videos you have a gift. :)

  • @gianfrancogarcia1491
    @gianfrancogarcia1491 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Very good bro. You just helped me prove someone wrong. They gave me the files and the materials library but they said that you couldn't transfer custom materials libraries from one computer to the next. The mistake that I was doing was specifying the path to the root of the materials folder hoping Revit will search inside that folder. Example: I was pointing my file\options
    ender\additional rendering appearance path to C:\Users\username\Pictures\material library\ and that was not working. So after watching your video, I noticed that these paths have to have direct access to the material files and not to a parent\folder so this is what I did. I specified all the folders in my materials library separately and that fixed the issue and I can work from any computer as long as I have my materials folder. Example C:\Users\username\Pictures\material library\tiles\ | C:\Users\username\Pictures\material library\floors\ | C:\Users\username\Pictures\material library\solid colors\ etc... Also to make this transfer successful, you need to create a new custom library, add all the used materials to the library and save that library in the same folder where you save your working file. That way you have everything in one place for better storage. When opening the new file in a new computer, step one: specify all the paths to the different folders inside your materials library that you used or keep all the materials files inside one folder without any sub folders. Step 2. Close Revit. Step 3. Open Revit again and launch the Manage\Material Browser and load the material library for that project. Step 4. Open project. Again thank you for the video. You help me a lot.

    • @BIMsmith
      @BIMsmith  4 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are most welcome. Thanks for your comment!

  • @shahdharesha1833
    @shahdharesha1833 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    THANK U

  • @yanwenwei4384
    @yanwenwei4384 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    Bless u

  • @rasara1996
    @rasara1996 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Its not working. They are just photos.