Pro-Lighting: Skies

by Blender Guru in Addons


Realistic Outdoor Lighting in an Instant

Notice: Pro-Lighting: Skies 1.4.0 is compatible with up to Blender 4.0

What if you had a tool that allowed you to instantly change your outdoor lighting to any time of the day, any weather, and be completely realistic?

The flexibility to choose any lighting style. The confidence to know that it will render. And the freedom to do what you do best: create art.

That’s Pro-Lighting: Skies: the fastest, easiest and most realistic outdoor lighting available for Blender. An all-in-one solution with:

  • Easy one-click outdoor lighting
  • Realistic lighting that’s accurate to the real world
  • HDR quality lighting, optimized for Blender


Why Lighting is Important

Just like a movie with bad audio, a scene with bad lighting is a waste of time.

All the effort you’ve put into modelling and texturing won’t matter, if the lighting is horrible.

Bad lighting undermines all your other effort and makes the whole render look amateurish.


“I can’t tell you how many demo reels I’ve reviewed where the artist’s models are beautiful, but the lighting is flat, unrealistic, and uninteresting—essentially an afterthought.” –Jeremy Vicker, Lighting Technical Director, Pixar

Good lighting on the other hand helps tell the story, effects the mood, and helps the viewer relate to it. If your lighting is good, the scene becomes significantly more believable to the viewer.


Why You Shouldn’t use Sun lamps

Many schools teach the “sunlamp” method for outdoor lighting.


But while this sounds logical, real lighting isn’t a single light source. It’s millions.


Step outside and look up at the sky, and you’ll see shades of blue from the atmosphere, reflected light from the clouds and a horizon gradient. It’s a dome of lighting in an endless variety of hues, saturations and values.

A sun lamp is only one light source, when you should be using closer to a million.


The “better” solution: HDRs


HDR lighting uses a single 360-degree photograph to light your scene instead of lamps.

This gives you that infinite dome of lighting needed to create realistic lighting. And because it’s based on a real photo, it’s accurate to the real world. Not surprisingly, this has quickly become a standard for the industry.

However, as much as I love HDR lighting, it causes a list of problems:

Problem #1: Frequent Crashes

The average high-res HDR ranges from 200-400mb in size. Which is huge!

So when it comes to rendering, Blender frequently crashes: 


While rendering an animation once, a scene repeatedly crashed despite our best efforts to optimize it. It was only when we looked at the lighting that we realized a single HDR sky was spiking the memory usage by a massive 4GB!

As an artist you shouldn’t have to worry about whether your lighting will kill the render or not.


Problem #2: Frustrating to Use

Due to their large size, HDRs can take over a minute to load their own thumbnail. 

So unless you’ve memorized what each hdr looks like, you’ll need to wait for each one to load. Few things are as tedious as waiting for 30 hdr thumbnails to load.

It’s also a burden to do even simple tweaks. Want to change the direction of the lighting? You’ll have to dig around in the nodes and try to remember that one field that allows you to do it.

All these technical burdens take you away from what you should really be doing: creating art.


Problem #3: Expensive

This is the big one.

Online HDRs range in price from around $30-$100 per sky! And since you’ll normally need a lot more than 1 to create different scenes, it quickly becomes out of reach for most artists (for example: 50 HDRs would set you back $1,500 on CGSkies).

There are some free HDRs online. But you usually get what you pay for, as many are out of focus, low resolution or just poor quality in general. 


So with this in mind, I set out to create a solution. A way for artists to light their scene realistically, be easy to use and allow them to focus on making art.

Introducing… Pro-Lighting: Skies

The tool we wish we always had: Pro-Lighting: Skies.

It’s the fastest, easiest and most realistic outdoor lighting available for Blender. 


It’s all the benefits of HDR lighting, with none of the downsides.


1. Realistic Lighting


Pro-Lighting: Skies contains a collection of 80 HDR skies that were captured by professional photographers around the world. Includes sunny, cloudy, overcast, morning, sunset, nighttime and evening skies.

Whatever scene you’re planning, you’ll find the right sky to suit.

2. Super Fast

No more waiting for a single thumbnail to appear. No more fiddling with nodes. Just click the sky you want and it’s done.

The process is so fast that it doubles as a tool for lighting exploration. Rapid-fire through dozens of skies in seconds, quickly exploring different moods and styles of lighting for your scene.


3. Up to 87% less memory than HDRs


No more annoying crashes.

Pro-Lighting Skies has been optimized for use with Blender, saving up to 87% memory over standard HDRs.

It does this through a clever usage of image formats and sizes to optimize how Blender renders it.

Finally you can focus on your art, with the ease of mind that your scene will render. 


4. User Friendly

Instead of needing to open the node editor and dig through nodes just to change the brightness, Pro-Lighting: Skies makes it infinitely easier.

All the values you’ll want to tweak are right there in the panel. Easily change the sun, sky light or rotation. Or change the saturation, hue or more settings in the advanced panel.

All the control you need, with none of the headaches. 


5. Affordable

We want to make HDR lighting available to the masses.

So while we could price it at the industry standard, we’re deliberately pricing it well below.

Typically, HDRs sell for $30-$100 each. So this pack of 80 HDRs would normally cost around $2,400 ($30 x 80 skies), and that’s without the add-on.

But Pro-Lighting: Skies is available today for just $197.

That’s all you’ll pay for the piece of mind of having your outdoor lighting taken care of forever.

Alternatively, if you’re an artist on more of a budget, you can get the Lite version for just $97 which features 30 skies instead 80.

Lite vs Ultimate: Sky Comparison



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Published almost 8 years ago
Blender Version 4.0, 3.6, 3.5, 3.4, 3.3, 3.2, 3.1, 3.0, 2.93, 2.92, 2.9, 2.8, 2.7x
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