Has anyone established a luminous power value that they use for a Vray plane light at an exterior window? Web articles are saying that unobstructed vertical windows should have between 100 - 200 lumens per square foot for unobstructed daylight and up to 500 for direct sunlight. If that is correct, a 4 foot by 4 foot window would produce around 3200 lumens of light, the same as two 100 watt incandescent light bulbs. Surely this can't be right.
In a test render of a recently completed building, a 4 foot by 4 foot Vray plane light needed a Luminous power value of 145000 to match a photo I took of the room using the same Vray camera settings as the digital camera settings used to photograph the room.
I've read all the posts found by searching for Luminous power and/or lumens and am not sure I totally understand how to begin using real world values for daylighting an interior scene. Any help, pointers, links explaining this would be very appreciated.
Craig
In a test render of a recently completed building, a 4 foot by 4 foot Vray plane light needed a Luminous power value of 145000 to match a photo I took of the room using the same Vray camera settings as the digital camera settings used to photograph the room.
I've read all the posts found by searching for Luminous power and/or lumens and am not sure I totally understand how to begin using real world values for daylighting an interior scene. Any help, pointers, links explaining this would be very appreciated.
Craig
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