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Chandelier in a room
Posted: Tue Jun 19, 2012 12:43 pm
by triplej28
Just messing around, trying to familiar myself with Indigo again.
Comments are welcome

Re: Chandelier in a room
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 2:26 am
by lycium
Those are quite nice looking, wish they were a little bigger though!
I guess they took a long time to render, judging from the colour noise in the first image I'd say you're using dispersive glass again

If you don't use the dispersive glass it'll converge muuuuch more quickly. Render mode suggestion: straight bidir (no MLT) with glass acceleration.
Re: Chandelier in a room
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 8:44 am
by triplej28
Hey man.. That glass is actually Saint-Gobain Grey

thought I'd test out some of those.
Doing this to show some second year arch students, specifically about CG materials that are based on real world data, and those glass made sense.. I'll try bidir raytrace today.. I still get confused aloft which one to use and where...
I'll do one with non-dispersive glass next time to cheat lol

Re: Chandelier in a room
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 10:59 am
by lycium
It does look good, and if you want the super realistic glass it's of course there to be used

Re: Chandelier in a room
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 11:12 am
by triplej28
Cheer
I was thinking for most arch students, it's easier to tell them to "pick from online presets" than tech "here, this is how you make a glass material".
I did another one with sun angle about 5 degrees slacker... the current setup makes funny looking shadow on the chair... Post it later.
Chandelier in a room
Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2012 5:16 pm
by Headroom
That "super realistic glass" will likely have much more visual impact on exterior scenes. On interior rendering you'll see mostly transmissible effects, however on exterior renderings these reflective properties are much more visible as most of these glasses are coated to reduce solar gain (galinette, please correct me if I am wrong).
Re: Chandelier in a room
Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2012 9:47 pm
by triplej28
Interesting comment about the glass.. I'll do some exterior to compare.
I do find the colour tone/shade of the Saint-Gobain produce is quite nice (physically accurate to their products???) as clients do care about sunlight quality through the glass into the room.
Perhaps with some comparative renders, I can make some "faster: glass with similar colour shade.