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  • Dome + Aerial Perspective

    I wonder if someone experienced that already. I think that if I wanted to create it, I never could.
    Using Maya 2019.3.1 , Vray Update 2.2, and PhoenixFD 4.00

    Simple scene with Phoenix ocean, HDRI dome light and aerial perspective. This happened when I rotated the camera inside a group to 90°.
    I tried to rotate the HDRI, but this doesn't change anything.
    Bug or hidden feature ?

    I have to add that I had a Vray sun before in the scene that was deleted afterwards.
    www.mirage-cg.com

  • #2
    I can't seem to reproduce the issue. Could you attach the scene here or send it to support@chaosgroup.com so we can take a look? Mention this thread in the e-mail.
    Aleksandar Hadzhiev | chaos.com
    Chaos Support Representative | contact us

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    • #3
      Originally posted by aleksandar.hadzhiev View Post
      I can't seem to reproduce the issue. Could you attach the scene here or send it to support@chaosgroup.com so we can take a look? Mention this thread in the e-mail.
      Thanks. Scene sent to support.
      www.mirage-cg.com

      Comment


      • #4
        Thanks for the provided scene. It seems a VRayAerialPerspective without a VRaySun has a default location (half of the environment), hence why rotating 90 degrees reveals a portion of the backside (it is noticeable without a camera as well). Note that VRayAerialPerspective is designed for use with VRaySun. Adding a sun is necessary and resolves the issue.
        Aleksandar Hadzhiev | chaos.com
        Chaos Support Representative | contact us

        Comment


        • #5
          Hi,

          Thanks. I was aware that Aerial Perspective needs a sun. I would have expected that Aerial Perspective gets ignored when you delete the sun. That's why I posted... It's only an unexpected behavior from what I understand.
          www.mirage-cg.com

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          • #6
            you can put in a sun and turn it off, just make sure that the sun is aligned with the sun of the HDR, then it works somehow, not 100% but ...

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            • #7
              Yes, just align the sun with a chrome sphere, you can match almost 100%
              https://www.artstation.com/damaggio

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              • #8
                thanks guy. I was putting a sun, but didn't try to turn it of and keep the aerial perspective. Sure, matching the sun with a dome using a chrome sphere is the way to go.
                www.mirage-cg.com

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                • #9
                  Awesome. I just found this and immediately solved my newest problem that I thought was going to irritate me
                  Thanks!
                  https://www.behance.net/bartgelin

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                  • #10
                    Down underexpose the HDR until the sun is a sharp dot and align the sun "directional light" in IPR.
                    https://www.artstation.com/damaggio

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                    • #11
                      I just eyeballed it and it seems to work fine but thanks, I will certainly do that if it goes wrong.
                      In theory if the sun is directional, would it really need to be exactly positioned if its shadows are not used?
                      https://www.behance.net/bartgelin

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                      • #12
                        If you have a sun than you have shadows, if the HDR is high quality and casts a hard shadow you might not need to position a source light.
                        https://www.artstation.com/damaggio

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Oh yeah sure...but I thought this was about the aerial perspective 'needing' a sun (but turned off) in order to work when using a dome with an HDRi.
                          So what I was meaning is I just eyeball the sun's position so it's close enough to whatever HDRi I use.
                          Its general angle definitely makes a difference in the shading of the aerial perspective but doesn't seem to need to be 'too' exactly placed, in order for it to work
                          https://www.behance.net/bartgelin

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