zimmer opened this issue on Feb 20, 2001 ยท 5 posts
zimmer posted Tue, 20 February 2001 at 5:32 AM
blau posted Tue, 20 February 2001 at 11:10 AM
my best advice, without trying to solve the actual problem. Render twice, once with the white background, one without and merge them in post.
Deimos posted Tue, 20 February 2001 at 11:49 AM
Try giving the object or ground plane that you are working with an ambient colour. Black will make it take the colour of the lights and have shadows. White will make it stay white but you will loose your shadows. I recomend trying a grey. You will keep your white ground and have light shadows. If you have a high CPU or a lot of time to render, or it's a still image your making double rendering as above works well to. I hope this helps.
zimmer posted Tue, 20 February 2001 at 12:30 PM
Deimos posted Tue, 20 February 2001 at 8:29 PM
Attached Link: http://www.angelfire.com/tv/MDD
Look's good to me. I had a similiar problem recently in the Animation we at ME productions are making. It was a winter setting. Even with this solution I was unable to get 1 shot up to par. If I can I will go back and check it out later. You may like my website at http://www.angelfire.com/tv/MDD there is a free download section to. Do you think a tutorial section covering things like poser sets and such would be an asset to the website? In any case I am happy I was able to help. It look's good.