create-3d-scene
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Esta habilidad de Claude automatiza la creación de escenas 3D en Blender utilizando la API bpy de Python para configurar de manera programática objetos, materiales, iluminación y cámaras. Está diseñada para generar visualizaciones reproducibles, automatizar configuraciones de renderizado y crear plantillas de flujos de trabajo por lotes. Úsala para integrar la generación de escenas 3D en tuberías de datos o para producir múltiples variaciones de escena de manera eficiente.
Instalación rápida
Claude Code
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Documentación
Create 3D Scene
Set up a complete Blender scene programmatically using the Python API (bpy). Configure scene hierarchy, add mesh objects, create PBR materials with node-based shaders, position lighting and cameras, and set up environment/world settings.
When to Use
- Creating reproducible 3D visualization scenes from scratch
- Automating product visualization or architectural rendering setup
- Generating multiple scene variations programmatically
- Building template scenes for batch rendering workflows
- Prototyping scene layouts before manual refinement
- Integrating 3D visualization into data pipelines or reporting systems
Inputs
| Input | Type | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scene specifications | Configuration | Objects, materials, lighting requirements | Product dimensions, material colors, lighting setup |
| Output requirements | Parameters | Resolution, render engine, quality settings | 1920x1080, Cycles, 128 samples |
| Asset paths | File paths | External models, textures, HDRIs | /path/to/hdri.exr, product_model.obj |
| Camera settings | Parameters | Position, rotation, focal length, DOF | location=(7,-7,5), lens=50mm |
| Environment | Configuration | World shader, background, ambient settings | HDRI lighting, solid color, gradient |
Procedure
1. Set Up Script Structure
Create a Python script with proper imports and structure:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
"""
Scene setup script for Blender.
Usage: blender --background --python setup_scene.py
"""
import bpy
import math
import os
from pathlib import Path
def clear_scene():
"""Remove all objects from the scene."""
bpy.ops.object.select_all(action='SELECT')
bpy.ops.object.delete(use_global=False)
# Clear orphaned data
for block in bpy.data.meshes:
if block.users == 0:
bpy.data.meshes.remove(block)
for block in bpy.data.materials:
if block.users == 0:
bpy.data.materials.remove(block)
def main():
clear_scene()
# Scene setup steps follow
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
Got: Script structure with clear_scene() and main() functions If fail: Review Python syntax, check bpy import works in Blender Python environment
2. Add Mesh Objects
Create primitive or imported mesh objects:
def add_objects():
"""Add mesh objects to scene."""
# Add cube
bpy.ops.mesh.primitive_cube_add(
size=2.0,
location=(0, 0, 1)
)
cube = bpy.context.active_object
cube.name = "Product_Base"
# Add sphere
bpy.ops.mesh.primitive_uv_sphere_add(
radius=1.0,
segments=32,
ring_count=16,
location=(3, 0, 1)
)
sphere = bpy.context.active_object
sphere.name = "Detail_Sphere"
# Import external model (optional)
# bpy.ops.import_scene.obj(filepath="model.obj")
return cube, sphere
Got: Objects appear in scene with correct names and positions If fail: Check operator syntax, verify coordinates, ensure no naming conflicts
3. Create Materials with Node-Based Shaders
Set up PBR materials using shader nodes:
def create_material(name, base_color, metallic=0.0, roughness=0.5):
"""Create a PBR material with node setup."""
# Create material
mat = bpy.data.materials.new(name=name)
mat.use_nodes = True
nodes = mat.node_tree.nodes
links = mat.node_tree.links
# Clear default nodes
nodes.clear()
# Add Principled BSDF
node_bsdf = nodes.new(type='ShaderNodeBsdfPrincipled')
node_bsdf.location = (0, 0)
node_bsdf.inputs['Base Color'].default_value = base_color + (1.0,) # Add alpha
node_bsdf.inputs['Metallic'].default_value = metallic
node_bsdf.inputs['Roughness'].default_value = roughness
# Add Material Output
node_output = nodes.new(type='ShaderNodeOutputMaterial')
node_output.location = (300, 0)
# Link nodes
links.new(node_bsdf.outputs['BSDF'], node_output.inputs['Surface'])
return mat
def apply_materials(cube, sphere):
"""Apply materials to objects."""
# Create materials
mat_red = create_material("RedPlastic", (0.8, 0.1, 0.1), metallic=0.0, roughness=0.4)
mat_metal = create_material("Metal", (0.8, 0.8, 0.8), metallic=1.0, roughness=0.2)
# Assign to objects
if cube.data.materials:
cube.data.materials[0] = mat_red
else:
cube.data.materials.append(mat_red)
if sphere.data.materials:
sphere.data.materials[0] = mat_metal
else:
sphere.data.materials.append(mat_metal)
Got: Materials visible in shader editor with proper node connections If fail: Check node types exist, verify link syntax, ensure color values in [0,1] range
4. Set Up Lighting
Configure lights for scene illumination:
def setup_lighting():
"""Add lights to scene."""
# Sun light
bpy.ops.object.light_add(
type='SUN',
location=(5, 5, 10)
)
sun = bpy.context.active_object
sun.name = "KeyLight"
sun.data.energy = 3.0
sun.rotation_euler = (math.radians(45), 0, math.radians(45))
# Area light (fill light)
bpy.ops.object.light_add(
type='AREA',
location=(-4, -4, 6)
)
area = bpy.context.active_object
area.name = "FillLight"
area.data.energy = 200.0
area.data.size = 5.0
area.rotation_euler = (math.radians(60), 0, math.radians(-135))
# Point light (rim light)
bpy.ops.object.light_add(
type='POINT',
location=(2, -5, 3)
)
point = bpy.context.active_object
point.name = "RimLight"
point.data.energy = 500.0
Got: Three lights with appropriate intensities and positions If fail: Adjust energy values for render engine (Cycles vs EEVEE), check rotation format
5. Position Camera
Set up camera with proper framing:
def setup_camera():
"""Add and configure camera."""
bpy.ops.object.camera_add(
location=(7, -7, 5)
)
camera = bpy.context.active_object
camera.name = "MainCamera"
# Point camera at origin
direction = (0, 0, 1) - camera.location
rot_quat = direction.to_track_quat('-Z', 'Y')
camera.rotation_euler = rot_quat.to_euler()
# Camera settings
camera.data.lens = 50 # Focal length in mm
camera.data.dof.use_dof = True
camera.data.dof.focus_distance = 10.0
camera.data.dof.aperture_fstop = 2.8
# Set as active camera
bpy.context.scene.camera = camera
Got: Camera positioned with correct focal length and DOF settings If fail: Use simpler rotation method if track_to fails, verify lens units
6. Configure World Environment
Set up world shader and background:
def setup_world():
"""Configure world environment."""
world = bpy.data.worlds['World']
world.use_nodes = True
nodes = world.node_tree.nodes
links = world.node_tree.links
# Clear default nodes
nodes.clear()
# Add Environment Texture (for HDRI)
node_env = nodes.new(type='ShaderNodeTexEnvironment')
node_env.location = (-300, 0)
# Load HDRI if available
hdri_path = "/path/to/hdri.exr"
if os.path.exists(hdri_path):
node_env.image = bpy.data.images.load(hdri_path)
# Add Background shader
node_bg = nodes.new(type='ShaderNodeBackground')
node_bg.location = (0, 0)
node_bg.inputs['Strength'].default_value = 1.0
# Add World Output
node_output = nodes.new(type='ShaderNodeOutputWorld')
node_output.location = (300, 0)
# Link nodes
links.new(node_env.outputs['Color'], node_bg.inputs['Color'])
links.new(node_bg.outputs['Background'], node_output.inputs['Surface'])
Got: World shader with HDRI or solid background configured If fail: Skip HDRI loading if file missing, use Background node alone with color
7. Configure Render Settings
Set basic render parameters:
def setup_render_settings():
"""Configure render settings."""
scene = bpy.context.scene
# Render engine
scene.render.engine = 'CYCLES' # or 'BLENDER_EEVEE'
scene.cycles.samples = 128
scene.cycles.use_denoising = True
# Output settings
scene.render.resolution_x = 1920
scene.render.resolution_y = 1080
scene.render.resolution_percentage = 100
# File format
scene.render.image_settings.file_format = 'PNG'
scene.render.image_settings.color_mode = 'RGBA'
scene.render.image_settings.color_depth = '16'
scene.render.filepath = "/tmp/render_"
Got: Render settings configured, ready for rendering If fail: Check engine name spelling, verify resolution values are positive integers
8. Organize Scene Hierarchy
Create collections for organization:
def organize_collections():
"""Organize objects into collections."""
# Create collections
col_geometry = bpy.data.collections.new("Geometry")
col_lights = bpy.data.collections.new("Lights")
col_cameras = bpy.data.collections.new("Cameras")
# Link to scene
bpy.context.scene.collection.children.link(col_geometry)
bpy.context.scene.collection.children.link(col_lights)
bpy.context.scene.collection.children.link(col_cameras)
# Move objects to collections
for obj in bpy.data.objects:
# Unlink from main collection
bpy.context.scene.collection.objects.unlink(obj)
# Link to appropriate collection
if obj.type == 'MESH':
col_geometry.objects.link(obj)
elif obj.type == 'LIGHT':
col_lights.objects.link(obj)
elif obj.type == 'CAMERA':
col_cameras.objects.link(obj)
Got: Objects organized in named collections for easier management If fail: Check collection already exists before creating, handle orphaned objects
Validation Checklist
- Script runs without errors in Blender background mode
- All expected objects present in scene outliner
- Materials show correct colors and properties in shader editor
- Camera positioned with objects in frame
- Lighting provides adequate illumination (test render)
- World environment loads correctly (HDRI or background color)
- Render settings configured appropriately for output requirements
- Scene organized logically in collections
- No orphaned data blocks (materials, meshes without users)
- Script includes clear_scene() for reproducibility
Pitfalls
- Object naming conflicts: Use unique names, check for existing objects before creating
- Incorrect color format: RGB values must be tuples (r, g, b, a) in [0,1] range
- Missing alpha channel: When setting colors, include alpha:
(r, g, b, 1.0) - Node connection errors: Verify node types have expected inputs/outputs before linking
- Camera not active: Must set
bpy.context.scene.camera = camera_object - Relative vs absolute paths: Use absolute paths or Path() for cross-platform compatibility
- Units confusion: Blender uses meters by default, camera lens in millimeters
- Rotation formats: Use
math.radians()for degree-to-radian conversion - Render engine differences: EEVEE and Cycles have different features and parameters
- Memory leaks: Clear orphaned data blocks to prevent memory buildup in batch operations
Related Skills
- script-blender-automation: Advanced scripting patterns for procedural modeling and batch operations
- render-blender-output: Configure rendering pipeline and execute renders
- create-2d-composition: 2D graphics composition using similar scripting approaches
Repositorio GitHub
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