Since you know the exact camera angle, you can now use the same photo as an .
fSpy is a powerful, open-source camera matching software that calculates camera position, orientation, and focal length based on vanishing lines. While fSpy doesn’t have a native "Install" button for 3ds Max, you can bridge the two easily.
In 3ds Max, go to and select the importer. fspy 3ds max
This article is your complete roadmap to using , covering installation, workflow, advanced tips, and troubleshooting.
For architectural visualization artists and 3D modelers, few tasks are as tedious—and as critical—as camera matching. You have a beautiful reference image of a building, but getting the 3D camera in your scene to align perfectly with the perspective of that photo can feel like solving a puzzle with half the pieces missing. Since you know the exact camera angle, you
Here’s a useful, actionable piece on using with 3ds Max — focused on solving a common pain point: aligning a 3D scene to a photographed background.
3ds Max doesn’t open .fspy natively, but you can use the fSpy2Max script (available on GitHub/ScripSpot). In 3ds Max, go to and select the importer
| Feature | 3DS Max Native Camera Match | fspy Workflow | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Slow, requires point helpers | Fast, visual point drawing | | Accuracy | Prone to numeric errors | Pixel-perfect vanishing points | | UI/UX | Dated dialogue boxes | Modern, graphical interface | | Focal Length | Manual trial/error | Auto-calculated from lines | | Cost | Included (Max only) | Free (Cross-platform) |