Hold down the option/alt key and drag the en.lproj folder into the Resources folder you created on your Desktop in step 2 above.Hold down the option/alt key and drag the yourlanguage.lproj folder into the Resources folder you created on your Desktop in step 2 above.A new Finder window should open in that folder. Paste in this path: /Applications/Rhinoceros.app/Contents/PlugIns/RhinoRenderV5.rhp/Contents/Resources/ and press the Go button.In Finder, navigate to Finder > Go > Go to Folder….Create folder called Resources on your Desktop. Ok, as (yet another) temporary work-around, let’s try moving all this content outside of Rhino (for the moment)… It also looks like the language-specific resources are aliases (symbolic links) back to the English content. …and, as you have discovered, using Rhino’s material editor to Browse to this location does not work. Applications/Rhinoceros.app/Contents/PlugIns/RhinoRenderV5.rhp/Contents/Resources/ I did not check the path correctly in my post above. The bug listed above is that the Rhino material editor is looking in the English folder for - in your case - the german file name and not finding it. *the names of the textures that come with Rhino are translated into each language. It’s on our list ( this solves your problem. I think we should store these files in a more sane location outside the Rhinoceros application bundle, such as in ~/Library/Application Support/McNeel/Rhinoceros/Render Content/Textures, as others have suggested. The rest of the material settings should be appropriate and correct. You will have to do the same thing with the bump texture (if applicable).If you click on de.lproj three folders up, then drill down into Render Content/Textures you should find “Hammered” in there.Rhino is trying to find the texture.png for this texture (whatever “Hammered” is in German) in the wrong language. It’s the en.lproj that is the problem*.
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