Hi
I am working on an architectural interior - office atrium, lots of glass. The best and quickest way for me to get a good GI solution (without using caustics etc) is to hide the glass whilst it is calculated, and then use this solution with the glass visible so that I get all the nice reflections everywhere.
The image rendered without the glass shows all the nice sun shadows streaming in through the glazing. But, when I unhide the glass, use the saved solution and render, the shadows are missing (what I mean is, the glass seems to be stopping the light passing through and creating a partial shadow). What is the best way to use a saved solution yet still have 'transparent/tinted' shadows from all the glass work?
Under 'object settings' in the system rollout, there is a tick box for Direct Light Shadows - what is this for and how does it relate to right-clicking on geometry, going to properties and de-selecting/selecting the 'cast shadows' option?
Examples:
http://www.blinkimage.com/vray/noglass.jpg
http://www.blinkimage.com/vray/withglass.jpg
Thanks
Rich
I am working on an architectural interior - office atrium, lots of glass. The best and quickest way for me to get a good GI solution (without using caustics etc) is to hide the glass whilst it is calculated, and then use this solution with the glass visible so that I get all the nice reflections everywhere.
The image rendered without the glass shows all the nice sun shadows streaming in through the glazing. But, when I unhide the glass, use the saved solution and render, the shadows are missing (what I mean is, the glass seems to be stopping the light passing through and creating a partial shadow). What is the best way to use a saved solution yet still have 'transparent/tinted' shadows from all the glass work?
Under 'object settings' in the system rollout, there is a tick box for Direct Light Shadows - what is this for and how does it relate to right-clicking on geometry, going to properties and de-selecting/selecting the 'cast shadows' option?
Examples:
http://www.blinkimage.com/vray/noglass.jpg
http://www.blinkimage.com/vray/withglass.jpg
Thanks
Rich
Comment