Forum Moderators: TheBryster
Bryce F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 4:28 pm)
I am kinda rusty on my Star Wars but weren't both suns near each other? Not on other sides of the planet. In that case they should both be out of view to the front of the scene. But anyway, what I would do is use the visible radial light for positioning since you can see it. It should be a good distance off and pretty dang bright to cast the shadows that would be cast. Turn off the visible aspect for the render though. What I might do is also reverse the light source so you have the actual sun visible and proper and the out of view light source where the sun is now since it doesn't matter as much. This should also add a little haze and such to the scene and break up the sky so the gradient isn't as strong. Good luck
I don't see any sectioned gradient? What are the settings of your vid card?
You can't call it work if you love
it... Zen
Tambour
Here's an idea that pops into my head. Since they used double exposure when filming to get the 2 suns in the movie, why not use the same technique here? Render one picture with the suns in one position, render the picture THE EXACT SAME WAY with the exception of where the sun is and the merge the two in Photoshop? Good, bad, indifferent?
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