Type of Glass?
Type of Glass?
Can anyone explane types of glass, and how can someone use all type of glass, because only thine glass doesn't appeare black.
THANKS
THANKS
Skindigo
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
Re: Type of Glass?
Hello,
Non-thin glasses are meant to be applied to volumes only.
This means, if you want to make a sheet of glass, for instance in a window, you must model it as a cube (and not as a single polygon) with some thickness (standard glass sheets have 4mm to 10mm thickness). Otherwise, it will appear black.
Etienne
Non-thin glasses are meant to be applied to volumes only.
This means, if you want to make a sheet of glass, for instance in a window, you must model it as a cube (and not as a single polygon) with some thickness (standard glass sheets have 4mm to 10mm thickness). Otherwise, it will appear black.
Etienne
Eclat-Digital Research
http://www.eclat-digital.com
http://www.eclat-digital.com
Re: Type of Glass?
Galinette is correct (as always) - if you want to use any glass other than the 'thin glass' then you need to have a volume, ie draw a box in sketchup and apply the glass material to both sides for it to work. If you apply glass to a single plane in sketchup it comes out black and shiny.
I think thin glass is quicker to render though? But won;t give you quite as realistic results as a proper glass material
See below, on the right is a single pane, renders black - on the left a volume (box) renders like glass.
I think thin glass is quicker to render though? But won;t give you quite as realistic results as a proper glass material
See below, on the right is a single pane, renders black - on the left a volume (box) renders like glass.
Re: Type of Glass?
only because you render it from behind /normals facing inside). from the other side you have a different resultBosseye wrote:If you apply glass to a single plane in sketchup it comes out black and shiny
polygonmanufaktur.de
Re: Type of Glass?
BY THE WAY, you get an incorrect result if you apply a specular shader to planar geometry.
Some time ago I had a very interesting discussion with Thomas (aka Lycium): he told me to try and use only the specular shader, instead of the Thing Glass. He strongly supports the correspondence between reality and modeling, because this points the rendering engine's development unidirectionally towards realistic algorithms and less to biased shortcuts, so the result can be more real-like. A good exemple can be the new "architectural glass" algorithm.
To make a long story short, always model volumes, because glass can be only tridimensional.
Some time ago I had a very interesting discussion with Thomas (aka Lycium): he told me to try and use only the specular shader, instead of the Thing Glass. He strongly supports the correspondence between reality and modeling, because this points the rendering engine's development unidirectionally towards realistic algorithms and less to biased shortcuts, so the result can be more real-like. A good exemple can be the new "architectural glass" algorithm.
To make a long story short, always model volumes, because glass can be only tridimensional.
Re: Type of Glass?
Not me squire! See below, the glass preset comes out black and shiny even if applied to the correct face on a single plane.Zom-B wrote:only because you render it from behind /normals facing inside). from the other side you have a different resultBosseye wrote:If you apply glass to a single plane in sketchup it comes out black and shiny
The red arrow is just for orientation so you can see I've rotated the view to show the back face (pure black as you know) The other box obviously shows the glass preset applied to a volume where it works correctly.
Re: Type of Glass?
Thank you all, very much. You have helped me a lot.
Skindigo
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
Re: Type of Glass?
Interested stained glass and grass. Maybe a little too much DOF, and underexposition.. Could you make a lighter version?
Re: Type of Glass?
can you explain me what do you mean by DOF and expo... Jes i can make brighter version Thanks
Skindigo
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
i7 5820K @3.3Ghz | GTX 660 Ti 3gb
Re: Type of Glass?
DOF = Depth Of Field, which basically means the distance put on focus. Higher number (e.g. f/22) results in clearer objects (I'm simplifying A LOT), low numbers (e.g. f/2) result in more out- of-focus objects.
Increase the ISO value to adjust the exposure: higher numbers mean lighter image.
Increase the ISO value to adjust the exposure: higher numbers mean lighter image.
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