Hey guys,
some materials are opaque to certain wavelengths of light but transparent to others. If you place a green glass in between a white light source and an outer red glass, the exiting light color becomes yellow/orange. A clever approach to use colored multi-component translucent materials to let e.g. the turn light shine yellow/orange when it´s turned on, while the tail lamp appears fully red from the outside when it’s turned off. I wonder if this is possible with V-Ray
The first test ended in a bad result, but maybe there is something wrong with the setup.
Here is the setup on a real car:
![Click image for larger version
Name: Glass_00.jpg
Views: 270
Size: 49.6 KB
ID: 1186185](filedata/fetch?id=1186185&d=1689342413&type=medium)
The technique applied to some other renderer:
![Click image for larger version
Name: Glass_02.jpg
Views: 226
Size: 170.6 KB
ID: 1186187](filedata/fetch?id=1186187&d=1689342438&type=medium)
And the test in V-Ray:
![Click image for larger version
Name: Glass_03.jpg
Views: 236
Size: 102.8 KB
ID: 1186188](filedata/fetch?id=1186188&d=1689343321&type=medium)
Regards
Oliver
some materials are opaque to certain wavelengths of light but transparent to others. If you place a green glass in between a white light source and an outer red glass, the exiting light color becomes yellow/orange. A clever approach to use colored multi-component translucent materials to let e.g. the turn light shine yellow/orange when it´s turned on, while the tail lamp appears fully red from the outside when it’s turned off. I wonder if this is possible with V-Ray
The first test ended in a bad result, but maybe there is something wrong with the setup.
Here is the setup on a real car:
The technique applied to some other renderer:
And the test in V-Ray:
Regards
Oliver
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