Is there a thing like index of glossines? Something like a general guideline how glossy certain materials should be. Can this even be measured somehow in real life?
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it can be measured for one specific material. Not translating to faked speculars or glossiness tho. Called BRDF measurement and it measures a whole lot more then just glossies. But it's still pretty damn expensive and not exactly "comfortable" to use. Plus it removes quite some control.
Thorsten
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As Percydaman said it is almost imposible to compile usefull results because there is so many variables involved.
I had once one of these tables and found it useless: values have ranges so wide that it renders it unusable.
For example:
Limestone: 35-55%
Polished aluminium: 65-75%
Oak polished: 20-35%
Polished marble: 30-70%
Instead I use a "guess what looks good" aproach
Zoran
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I heard about those BRDF measurments. A friend of mine uses Inspirerer with this information to produce very accurate lighting analysis.
Although, i still wonder, why couldn't a simple test be made, just by measuring a diameter of a highlight on a sphere made out of certain materials?Dusan Bosnjak
http://www.dusanbosnjak.com/
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because maybe it's not linear the way the specular changes given light angle and light size.
A guess, hey...
I hear even with IoRs there are issues (in maxwell) in that oftetimes complex, measured IoRs don't work as the user expects.
But it's stuff i gathered from their forums, not personal tests...
Lele
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