ommit opened this issue on Sep 01, 2008 · 7 posts
ommit posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 7:01 AM
hi ,
is it possible to render and create HDRI´s out of vue....with the sky clouds and atmo....to use these in other apps for lightning???
thx for info
cheers
Rutra posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 8:34 AM
I never used it in practice but theoretically, according to the manual, all you have to do is save the resulting render in HDR format (choose HDR from the format list when you are saving the image). You don't have to do anything special to render, just do it normally.
Trepz posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 9:35 AM
Yep, sure is(;
"Many are willing to suffer for their art. Few are willing to learn to draw."
silverblade33 posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 11:00 AM
Export as UV sphere (for use in Vue), very large resolution if you want it to look good, like 3000+.
That's how I do my "Self HDR Lighting" trick ;)
"I'd rather be a
Fool who believes in Dragons, Than a King who believes in
Nothing!" www.silverblades-suitcase.com
Free tutorials, Vue & Bryce materials, Bryce Skies, models,
D&D items, stories.
Tutorials on Poser imports
to Vue/Bryce, Postwork, Vue rendering/lighting, etc etc!
jc posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 11:09 AM
If you want save a render in .HDR format, you should first turn off that "Natural film response" checkbox in the "Film settings" of the post processing "Post Render Options" dialog.
It somewhat limits the dynamic range, from what I hear. Have played a bit with a couple of 3rd party HDR tone mapping programs and turning it off did improve the HDR images.
chippwalters posted Mon, 01 September 2008 at 10:17 PM
In render settings be sure and check "Panoramic View" (360) AND "Spherical Render" (180).
Choose a render size that's big like 2048 x 1024.
As Jim says, don't use Natural film response. Be sure and save as .hdr.
The goal is to have as large a dynamic range as possible, so you want bright whites and black blacks-- if possible. Radiosity, GI, or AI is typically not necessary-- neither is good anti-aliasing as these will all take much longer to render.
Those with multi-core processors will only use 1 core when rendering panoramas. HTH.
matrixmode posted Tue, 02 September 2008 at 10:44 PM
Quote - Those with multi-core processors will only use 1 core when rendering panoramas. HTH.
Good to know! Thanks! But why only one core?
"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." Leonardo da Vinci