Emberghost opened this issue on Mar 23, 2003 ยท 9 posts
Emberghost posted Sun, 23 March 2003 at 10:49 PM
antevark posted Sun, 23 March 2003 at 11:11 PM
there should usually be shadows, looks like u might hav too many lights in that scene
Emberghost posted Sun, 23 March 2003 at 11:37 PM
to many lights? In that picture there is only 1 light right above the 2 figures. Maybe not enough? and if so how should I place the lights to maybe get a more realistic feeling to it?
antevark posted Sun, 23 March 2003 at 11:38 PM
is the light set to make shadows? are the models?
Bladesmith posted Mon, 24 March 2003 at 1:53 AM
Looks like an ambience problem.......try turning down the ambience on the ground material, see if that helps.
Incarnadine posted Mon, 24 March 2003 at 11:16 AM
when you turned off the sunlight (disable sun button in skylab) did you also turn off the sun/moon shadows button. This must remain on as it seems to be the master toggle for casting shadows. Just a thought.
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tjohn posted Mon, 24 March 2003 at 1:30 PM
The one light in your scene may be placed too close and/0r at too high a setting on the power (wrong term I think, I mean the first setting on the upper left in the light lab). This will overexpose to the point of losing shadows, sometimes. Also the individual light has to has shadows turned on in the light lab. Hope this helps.
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Emberghost posted Mon, 24 March 2003 at 7:48 PM
All your comments helped, it looks alot better now. Thx to all that replied.
EricofSD posted Mon, 24 March 2003 at 11:01 PM
I usually end up postworking shadows in images like that.