Sat, May 18, 12:39 AM CDT

Update to Red in a Gazebo

DAZ|Studio Romance posted on Nov 21, 2005
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Description


Well, this one puzzled me. I decided the torch was too ugly to pass muster, so I had to fix that; then of course I had to add shadows. The bottom image is with shadows from a point light; I had this problem with the last image I posted, too, so I suppose the answer is "Don't use point lights for shadows." That bites! :D Anyone have a better answer? Back to the top, I borrowed a texture at random for the pillar of the torch, made the bowl glass, and put the flame where it ought to be. I also brightened it up, for folks with dim displays. Now, IT has shadow problems, too: See them? On the ceiling, at the left. That shadow is from her elbow, but where did the stripes come from? Evanara said something to me about shadow bias, but this was a three-hour render... Can someone answer me faster than that? :D TIA! Same credits as in my previous version.

Comments (11)


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Unicornst

10:03PM | Mon, 21 November 2005

I'm totally lost on this one. May I suggest posting it at the Daz Studio Forum at Daz3D and asking there? Someone might have a faster solution there. Be sure to tell them the specs on the computer used. That seems to help them come up with a solution.

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BBarbs

10:03PM | Mon, 21 November 2005

Unfortunately I dont have an answer. I rather like the light that the torch puts out in the top image. I can see that it isnt realistic, but perhaps it is a lucky accident. I have found that glass can be hard to work with. If you used a glass for the pillar and the bowl that is highly reflective, you are going to get light bouncing all over the place. The only thing can think of that might help would be to use a frosted glass. Other than that, I am clueless.

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Digitell

6:31AM | Tue, 22 November 2005

I like the idea of using a frosted glass...otherwise I would render the image using just basic lights and then taking it into Photoshop and manually applying the light and shadows to where they should be...I really like the top image best!! :)

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micsteel

7:40AM | Tue, 22 November 2005

Oh, for the top image, I used a spotlight.

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Star4mation

10:41AM | Tue, 22 November 2005

I like the lighting in the top one Mic. Although the shadow of her elbow may not be 100% accurate, I think you have a happy medium between accuracy and being able to see the girl lit up as she should be. As you said to me in my image "The Last Goodbye" Night scenes are difficult to illuminate realisticly because in the dark we cannot see very well, but as an image we want to look at something other than the darkness of reality. After all the girl is what we want to see!

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shanpoo

6:39PM | Tue, 22 November 2005

Pretty image I know your seeking advice but you still tell me all the time my lights are wrong--which by the way Im learning. I think the image does look very pretty. I personally like the lighting.....shanpoo ;}

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JenX

6:43PM | Tue, 22 November 2005

What I would recommend (and, lol, don't scream, it doesn't hurt for long, lol), would be to use point lights for the light coming from the fire, but use a low-level (maybe 20-25%) distant light, coming from the far right. Use the light as a "camera" to set it up properly. If you want to keep with a yellow light, don't use an obvious yellow, possibly an orangy yellow, and so light that you almost can't see that it's coloured. I've heard a lot of people don't like distance lights, lol, but they can be your friend ;) They really can :D

debh

7:41PM | Fri, 25 November 2005

I've had similar issues (your bottom image) with some 2D objects from older versions of Poser, but I don't think this is the same. Sorry I can't help, I'm terrible with lights! I rely a lot on presets that come with packages I buy, LOL!

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morin3000

8:38AM | Sat, 26 November 2005

WOW... She is gorgeous!!!! Wonderful portrait and perfect lighting!!!! Excellent work!! * V****

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Deane

2:14AM | Wed, 07 December 2005

Beautiful character and first class lighting! Excellent work!

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bybydvd

7:52PM | Thu, 15 December 2005

Michael I have not understood your problem well...but the lights to me seem good...this image is wonderful EXCELLENT


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