The way cinerender is setup, it is possible to get fairly decent results without knowing all the bells and whistles as a starting point.
There is a library with a lot of surfaces set up to look good in cinerender. Ussually these are enough or easy enough to just change a colour somewhere in the colour channel settings to get what you need.
There are also preset scenes for outdoor and indoor renders with fast, medium and final tags.
I started out with these things and since we need our renders to be fast, but also decent looking I researched a bit which advanced settings changes from the fast preset yield results. This is the advice I've given on several posts on this forum.
The help documentation and youtube tutorials are heaps better than the information that was out there for Lightworks at the time. We also used artlantis for a while, but that was 3rd party software, so can't really expect GS to provide information there.
Coming back to scenes, once you find something that works, you can save it as a scene and export / import that for future use.
Erwin Edel, Project Lead, Leloup Architecten
www.leloup.nlArchiCAD 9-26NED FULL
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