Perhaps this is a more general question about lighting --
When observing others managing the light levels in their scenes (I'm generally talking about interior spaces), I've noticed that some people will take the approach of using the default brightness/intensity of the V-Ray sun and environment, and then modify other lights and the EV value within the Exposure Gain section of the Physical Camera to accommodate.
Probably more frequently, I've seen the reverse, where people seem to leave the EV value alone, and adjust all the lights in the scene (including V-Ray Sun) to accommodate the camera's EV value.
Is there a generally preferred approach for handling exposure for interior spaces with V-Ray? Does it make a difference if I'm trying to adopt a Linear Workflow?
I've searched around and found this from another thread here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exposure_value
Seems to suggest using an EV value of 5-7 for interior artificially lit scenes.
When observing others managing the light levels in their scenes (I'm generally talking about interior spaces), I've noticed that some people will take the approach of using the default brightness/intensity of the V-Ray sun and environment, and then modify other lights and the EV value within the Exposure Gain section of the Physical Camera to accommodate.
Probably more frequently, I've seen the reverse, where people seem to leave the EV value alone, and adjust all the lights in the scene (including V-Ray Sun) to accommodate the camera's EV value.
Is there a generally preferred approach for handling exposure for interior spaces with V-Ray? Does it make a difference if I'm trying to adopt a Linear Workflow?
I've searched around and found this from another thread here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exposure_value
Seems to suggest using an EV value of 5-7 for interior artificially lit scenes.
Comment