What is the View Keeper?

The View Keeper is a special tool for Blender that helps you manage your camera settings. It saves your camera views and settings so you do not have to set them up every time. This tool makes your work faster…
The View Keeper is a special tool for Blender that helps you manage your camera settings. It saves your camera views and settings so you do not have to set them up every time. This tool makes your work faster…
GoPro cameras have become synonymous with extreme sports, adventure filmmaking, and immersive virtual reality experiences. Their signature wide-angle lenses, slight fisheye distortion, and dynamic motion capture give footage an energetic, immersive quality. In Blender, you can replicate these unique characteristics…
When you create an animation, you often want the camera to follow a character. This makes your story come alive and gives your scene a professional look. Imagine a movie where the camera glides smoothly behind a hero or follows…
Animating a zoom effect with the Blender camera is a fun and creative way to make your 3D scenes look more dynamic and engaging. A zoom effect makes the camera get closer to or farther away from a subject without…
A background image can help you work in Blender by showing you a picture behind your 3D scene. This picture can be a sketch, a reference, or a design that you want to follow. When you add a background image…
Sometimes, you need the camera to line up exactly along a specific axis. This helps you get clear and professional-looking shots. For example, in architectural visualization, a perfectly aligned camera can show clean, straight lines of a building. In animation…
A drone camera gives a unique view of the world. It glides smoothly above landscapes and moves like a bird in the sky. In Blender, you can simulate a drone camera to capture your 3D scene in dynamic, cinematic ways.…
Cameras in Blender let you see your work from different angles and help you tell a story with your scene. Sometimes, you may want to change the view quickly. Toggling between camera views makes it easy to see your scene…
Cameras in Blender serve as the eyes of your 3D scene, capturing the world you create from different angles and perspectives. A single camera is often enough for simple renders, but when you work on animations, cinematic sequences, or detailed…
In some projects, you may want a camera that does not show perspective. You want all lines to stay parallel and objects to appear the same size regardless of distance. This is called orthographic mode. In this article, we explain…