This is a well-optimized project with some nice assets and will give you the confidence to learn how to produce incredible renderings in a short space of time. My experience of using Enscape on my MacBook M1 Pro has been both enjoyable and rewarding, and I have been able to quickly produce high-quality renderings as you can see in my featured videos.Īs a good way to start, I recommend getting a 14-day trial of the software, and starting with the “Apple Hills” demo file for SketchUp. Over the last few months, I have been involved in the open beta, and now that the final release of Enscape for Mac is available, I have started using it in my workflow on both PC and Mac. Enscape can quickly produce stunning, high-resolution interior, exterior and landscape visuals that are exported within seconds. It produces a fully editable 3D model by communicating with CAD data in real time, so each change is instantaneous in the visualization. One of the main benefits of Enscape is that rather than being a separate design software, Enscape acts as a plugin to your design program. The simplicity of Enscape’s interface is one of its main advantages over its competitors, as it allows designers to complete renderings in-house without much training, negating the need to outsource to an outside visualization team. What is Enscape?Įnscape is a real-time rendering plugin that integrates seamlessly with your design software and allows you to produce high-quality renders very easily. Enscape for Mac currently works with SketchUp 20, but other integrations with popular CAD software like Vectorworks are planned. The release of Enscape for Mac now brings a truly integrated real-time visualization workflow to the Mac platform.
These new models, like the new M1 MacBook Pro, have very powerful built-in graphics with 16 or 32-core GPUs, and the new Mac Studio even has a 64-core GPU model!Ī major milestone for Mac-based renderingĮnscape's popular real-time rendering software is now available for the Mac platform following a successful open beta. That has now changed with the advent of Apple’s recently released M1 and M2-based silicon with powerful integrated multi-core graphics processing units (GPU) using unified memory. However, over the last few years, real-time rendering on the Mac platform has been developing at a slower pace than that of Windows OS. The Apple Mac Operating System (OS) is the tool of choice for many creative designers due to its ease of use and seamless integration of hardware and software, and beautifully designed products like the iMac and Mac Book Pro.