grafikdon opened this issue on Feb 08, 2002 ยท 8 posts
grafikdon posted Fri, 08 February 2002 at 10:51 PM
nyar1ath0tep posted Fri, 08 February 2002 at 11:31 PM
Try the "Anything Glows" extension.
hartcons posted Fri, 08 February 2002 at 11:35 PM
Have you tried the light cone effect (look under the Effects part of the spotlight in the properties drawer) and/or using the glow channel in some of your shaders and/or adding glowing objects at the point where the light is supposed to originate (and you could amplify the glow with the Aura scene effect)? Guess it depends on whether you need to have visible light beams.
litst posted Fri, 08 February 2002 at 11:42 PM
Just a guess, i think it's because the glass of the headlights casts shadows, so the light can't pass through it . If you disable their "cast shadows" tickbox in the properties tray, does that help ?
grafikdon posted Sat, 09 February 2002 at 1:35 AM
Julian_Boolean posted Sat, 09 February 2002 at 12:13 PM
Hi Grafikdon, I don't know if this is true for Carrara, but Ray Dream's volumetric lighting effects cannot be viewed through transparent objects (a program bug). In your rendering above, both of the light cones appear to originate from outside of the vehicle's headlights. If you moved the spotlights into the headlights, the light cones would fail to render even thought the headlight lenses are mostly transparent. I've not yet downloaded "Anything Glows" which was referred to in a recent thread, but I usually use two lights within a fixture. The first is a spotlight as you have used, and the second is a bulb light to illuminate the fixture itself (high brightness and low range settings). Regarding the drift of your lights, grouping them to the rest of your model should have kept them in place. You might try an object link set to "lock", but first I would check the animation timeline to make sure that you don't have any unwanted keyframes affecting the movement of your lights. Hope something in there helps Jim Z. a.k.a. Julian Boolean
DotPainter123 posted Sat, 09 February 2002 at 2:34 PM
Kixum posted Sat, 09 February 2002 at 11:24 PM
I also agree with most everything said in the last two messages but I would also add a little bit of glow to the lenses of your vehicle if it will be filmed this far away. I have had significant difficulty getting some of the lighting effects to work through objects that are transparent in Raydream but I haven't tried too many of them since I moved to C. I have full confidence that you can get the effect you're after with C. Sometimes in my animations, if I've been playing around with a lot of keyframes, some stuff just does things they shouldn't and I would suggest getting rid of your extraneous key frames or even starting over if you're not too deep into it. C can just simply get confused if you've done regrouping or added/subtracted stuff after you've started framing up things. -Kix
-Kix