We all know that the direction of the arrow in a VRay rectangle light in Sketch-up shows the direction. That the main light rays will take, with the directionality value further influencing how much the light is scattered away from that direction.
I also know that the rectangle can be scaled in Sketchup to make it physically larger (wider and/or longer).
There are also U Size and V Size values which confuse me: changing them does not affect the size of the rectangle in the Sketchup interface so how do these settings and the scaled size of the rectangle affect things?
Finally, the scale tool in Sketchup is often used in video tutorials to “stretch” the arrow of a rectangle light object to make it longer. What affect does changing the arrow length have in the render?
For example, in many tutorials I see someone lighting a whole interior scene with a single large rectangle light positioned outside a window, pointing inwards. The rectangle may be 10 feet high and 12 feet wide but often the length of the arrow is left default (around 2 feet long I’d guess). And then they add an accent LED strip light under a cabinet in a kitchen in the same scene and they intentionally scale the arrow to make it very long. Why would they do this?
I also know that the rectangle can be scaled in Sketchup to make it physically larger (wider and/or longer).
There are also U Size and V Size values which confuse me: changing them does not affect the size of the rectangle in the Sketchup interface so how do these settings and the scaled size of the rectangle affect things?
Finally, the scale tool in Sketchup is often used in video tutorials to “stretch” the arrow of a rectangle light object to make it longer. What affect does changing the arrow length have in the render?
For example, in many tutorials I see someone lighting a whole interior scene with a single large rectangle light positioned outside a window, pointing inwards. The rectangle may be 10 feet high and 12 feet wide but often the length of the arrow is left default (around 2 feet long I’d guess). And then they add an accent LED strip light under a cabinet in a kitchen in the same scene and they intentionally scale the arrow to make it very long. Why would they do this?
Comment