You can use the dome light with GI quite successfully.
Usually, most of the fine shadow details in exterior scenes come from the skylight, while GI effects are a lot smoother.
When you use the irradiance map to represent the skylight, you need high settings to get good detail and even so, this may take a lot of time.
With the dome light, you leave the details to the light, while the irradiance map only has to take care of the more smooth secondary illumination. In this way, you can get a better-looking image in less time.
The real advantage of the dome light will be obvious when you can use a HDR image to map it - in this case, it will produce much cleaner results that GI, because it will put more samples in the brighter parts of the map, instead of doing uniform sampling.
Best regards,
Vlado
Usually, most of the fine shadow details in exterior scenes come from the skylight, while GI effects are a lot smoother.
When you use the irradiance map to represent the skylight, you need high settings to get good detail and even so, this may take a lot of time.
With the dome light, you leave the details to the light, while the irradiance map only has to take care of the more smooth secondary illumination. In this way, you can get a better-looking image in less time.
The real advantage of the dome light will be obvious when you can use a HDR image to map it - in this case, it will produce much cleaner results that GI, because it will put more samples in the brighter parts of the map, instead of doing uniform sampling.
Best regards,
Vlado
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