lior opened this issue on Jan 27, 2011 · 6 posts
lior posted Thu, 27 January 2011 at 10:22 AM
hobepaintball posted Fri, 28 January 2011 at 5:43 AM
In the case of that artist a camera.
ShawnDriscoll posted Fri, 28 January 2011 at 6:04 AM
Move just east of Carson City for those kind of clouds. :)
lior posted Fri, 28 January 2011 at 6:21 AM
Quote - Move just east of Carson City for those kind of clouds. :)
Shawn..
Hi
I simply would like if it's possible with Vue to get those atmo settings: clouds...light settings...
Thank you for your help,
hobepaintball posted Fri, 28 January 2011 at 7:46 AM
Well i sent a more nuanced answer from my blackberry but it never showed up so here goes.
1.) the atmosphere editor is very easy to understand and is very well documented in the manuals.
2). More important is your eye. Look at this picture and try to determine where the sun is in the sky. Play with pitch and azimuth in an empty scene until you get the sun there. What kind of clouds are these. You may want to do some research on cloud types, or just remember what you learned from high school. How dense are they? do they let light through everywhere or just at the edges? How high is the top and how low is the bottom. Are there more than 1 type, are they in layers, how far away are they. What about fog and haze, how low, how high, how dense, what color. That is how you do this atm.
da1imu posted Fri, 28 January 2011 at 8:07 AM
Function editor to create your custom clouds.
Everything else can be done using the spectral 3 engine of Vue.
Excellent training video for this is "Capturing the brilliance of light" from quadspinner and many, many hours of experimenting!