Robo2010 opened this issue on Nov 06, 2004 ยท 22 posts
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 3:35 PM
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 3:36 PM
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 3:36 PM
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 3:37 PM
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 3:37 PM
geep posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 4:31 PM
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
Robo2010 posted Sat, 06 November 2004 at 4:49 PM
yes!, also the beams little wider... :-)
compiler posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 9:53 AM
What are your "distance start" and "distance end" specs ?
Robo2010 posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 11:23 AM
I have em at "0.000" Thought those are for shadows.
compiler posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 11:42 AM
I think the light fades from 100% on at distance start to 00% on at distance end. You may try to increase both distances to see if it makes a difference.
Robo2010 posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 1:08 PM
Wondering though, if I am doing the right technique, like using 2 spotlights and position. Also if their is another alternative, or better way. I am still playing around what I have, and using the advice here. :-)
Message edited on: 11/07/2004 13:09
Robo2010 posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 11:40 PM
Robo2010 posted Sun, 07 November 2004 at 11:41 PM
compiler posted Mon, 08 November 2004 at 5:42 AM
Uh, oh... Rings a bell... It seems there is some sort of transparent material where your lights are. And there seem to be some sort of shadowy banding in your first pic. Couldn't it be a problem of turning the shadows off for these lights ? Just a thought.
Robo2010 posted Mon, 08 November 2004 at 7:20 AM
"Couldn't it be a problem of turning the shadows off for these lights ?" Correct, Shadows are off.
Robo2010 posted Mon, 08 November 2004 at 8:19 AM
semidieu posted Mon, 08 November 2004 at 10:07 AM
Robo2010 posted Mon, 08 November 2004 at 12:56 PM
Yes..and Yes, I own P5... :-)
Robo2010 posted Tue, 09 November 2004 at 12:59 AM
Message edited on: 11/09/2004 00:59
Robo2010 posted Tue, 09 November 2004 at 1:31 AM
Great, must be getting tired. Grammer is bad, and I went to do a render using "Atmosphere", clicked in the box for a checkmark "Volume On", then do a Render...Poser crashes (hangs).
semidieu posted Tue, 09 November 2004 at 1:32 PM
I used the atmosphere to do this. But the more lights you have, the more difficult it will render. My version only has to 2 lights (for the green lights, because the render used more lights) I placed the first light, then load the second. Instead of placing manually the second light, i made ctrl-c on the first light and ctrl-v on the second. And then changed the second light rotation. Last but not least: with Poser5 (and Poser4 ?), you can change the maximum of each value. Giving the value 180 to angle_start and angle_end will create something like a point light (the trick is from Ynsaen, if i remember well) And another trick to reduce the difficulty is to decrease the map size of the light you use (as it is for a "big" scene, a low value should be enough. Hope it helps.
ChuckEvans posted Thu, 11 November 2004 at 7:43 AM
Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/viewed.ez?galleryid=290371&Start=1&Artist=ChuckEvans&ByArtist=Yes
I know it might not be a good suggestion but you might consider Vue 4 (at a really great price now). I'm not very good in 3D stuff but was able to make a "reasonable" image with a lot of lights (inside and outside) sort of like what you are trying for in the attached image. WOrking with lights in Vue is very easy!