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this one i found in a big swedish furniture house with yellow letters. it
is probably a garlic press (of course i know how to use it, but i do not
know if it is the right word). some little things have to be bettered
(suggestions welcome). until the bolts are missing the object seems to be
complete. rendertime without radiosity is 19s. with: 15min.
the surfaces make me a headache. first time ever i put the camera so close
onto an object (location <0,0.6,-0.2> look_at <0,0.5,0>) and now the
surface of the table and the wall are blurred (see red circles in minipic).
the misterious is that the wall is three units away from camera and it has
no normals or finishes, it is only flat. i can not explain the blur. the
light source is a White*2 spotlight with area lights (four x four) and it
is one unit away.
another question: the pigment color of the table is much brighter than the
result if rendered with radiosity. said better: the table in the scene is
brown, but the pigment color i set was beige (see spot on pic). how can i
calculate in depency of light the resulting color if i use radiosity?
thanks in advance
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marabou wrote:
>
> this one i found in a big swedish furniture house with yellow letters. it
> is probably a garlic press (of course i know how to use it, but i do not
> know if it is the right word). some little things have to be bettered
> (suggestions welcome). until the bolts are missing the object seems to be
> complete. rendertime without radiosity is 19s. with: 15min.
> the surfaces make me a headache. first time ever i put the camera so close
> onto an object (location <0,0.6,-0.2> look_at <0,0.5,0>) and now the
> surface of the table and the wall are blurred (see red circles in minipic).
> the misterious is that the wall is three units away from camera and it has
> no normals or finishes, it is only flat. i can not explain the blur. the
> light source is a White*2 spotlight with area lights (four x four) and it
> is one unit away.
I think some rounding of the corners would be good, otherwise using it
will be pretty dangerous.
> another question: the pigment color of the table is much brighter than the
> result if rendered with radiosity. said better: the table in the scene is
> brown, but the pigment color i set was beige (see spot on pic). how can i
> calculate in depency of light the resulting color if i use radiosity?
> thanks in advance
You can not say what color the surface will have, since this is exactly
what radiosity calculates, but the main influences are the light source(s)
and the colors of the surrounding objects. If your table seems too dark,
increase diffuse finish or light source intensity or make the surrounding
(for example the ceiling) brighter.
Christoph
--
Christoph Hormann <chr### [at] gmxde>
IsoWood include, radiosity tutorial, TransSkin and other
things on: http://www.schunter.etc.tu-bs.de/~chris/
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