jimgranite opened this issue on Nov 17, 2004 ยท 21 posts
jimgranite posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 10:55 AM
rodluc2001 posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 11:09 AM
WOW ! what great experiment !! fanstastic ! i think this can do many possibility !! thanx !
nanotyrannus posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 11:45 AM
I agree, that's a great idea, I will definately have to try that for indoor lighting when I get a chance, Thanks for sharing!
LuckyLook posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 12:50 PM
YESSSS !!!!! Was one of the things I was wondering about !!! When I was using C4D for my renders, I sometimes lit my scenes using luminosity on objects and I was wondering if Vue could do the same !! Thanks for the info :) :) :) :)
Ms_Outlaw posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 1:53 PM
Very cool, thanks for sharing.
SAMS3D posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 2:20 PM
So cool....I am getting anxious again waiting for this in Vue Pro
Veritas777 posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 3:58 PM
This would make a great lighting effect for a UFO scene!
war2 posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 5:19 PM
real nice looking experiement, thanks for sharing!
dlk30341 posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 6:31 PM
Excellent tip! This will come in quite handy :) Thank You!
Helgard posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 6:46 PM
Guess how we will be doing Lightsabres from now on?
Your specialist military, sci-fi, historical and real world site.
sittingblue posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 7:48 PM
an amazing tip. Thanks for sharing!!
Charles
BeZerK posted Wed, 17 November 2004 at 9:21 PM
This is a very cool tip, thanks. I haven't done too many indoor scenes myself, but I can think of a great many possibilities for this. Thanks again.
wolffenrir posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 1:44 AM
ohhhh, great news!! I was wondering if there was a way to make some kind of neon lightning.... I'm going to try it, thanks for the tip!!
TheWingedOne posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 4:07 AM
This looks very cool! Hopefully this will be implmented into VuePro 5 as well. :)
Richmathews posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 4:47 AM
So we have text and we have glowing light emitting materials........I think we have neon lettering!!! The possibilities are endless!!
impish posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 5:00 AM
Oh how my poor computer is going to hate me when Vue 5 Pro comes out. 3 years of courses on lighting and luminaire design at University and now Vue will let me model lights so they are more than point sources or clusters of point sources. I was pretty much sold on getting Vue 5 Pro before and waiting patiently for it. Now I'm impatiently waiting for its release :-)
Dale B posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 5:52 AM
Oh boy...... (looks at all of Davo's and Dendras's scene construction kits). This just opened up the window even further. If you can pull this off with liquids...Lava illuminated scenes. Or toxic sludge. And the metablobs could get into some interesting looks, as well...
Angelouscuitry posted Thu, 18 November 2004 at 11:34 AM
svdl posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 7:04 AM
This is cool! So it's possible to light a scene from glowing coals/embers, or red hot iron, yummie!
The pen is mightier than the sword. But if you literally want to have some impact, use a typewriter
war2 posted Fri, 19 November 2004 at 8:42 AM
the effect is actually better when it is in a room angelouscuitry, it gets realy washed out if its outdoors as jimgranite said. im not 100% sure but as i understands the gain in the sky effect is a measurement of how much the lightsource(s) affects the "room space", im sure e.on woudnt explain it like that but thats how it works in my eyes:) so when its inside in a enclosed environment the effect gets better since the walls bounces the light and since the enclosed environment doesnt have a big ass sky that affects the room space like a overgrown lightbulb the lightsource(s) comes off much better. anyway, thats my plain language explanation im sure someone will come around and rectify it :)
Angelouscuitry posted Sun, 21 November 2004 at 6:25 PM