This is a scene from a set of C4D Visual. The materials I like corrected (they are also not particularly properly exported), light didn't touch, hoping on the uptake of Indigo. Here's what happened
Indigo...
Hence the question-suggestion-please...When Indigo will have its own "light room"?
I think it would be so much easier and more efficient, so the exported light can be adjusted in the Indigo, and to add new sources if required. And now have to guess how, where, and what kind of light you need to put for the lighting to be such as you want.
(time - 8,23 min., with AO and GI)...Crooked aportrait light?
Crooked aportrait light?
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- Oscar J
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Re: Crooked aportrait light?
Hi bvn, Indigo for Cinema 4D has integrated rendering for this specific purpose - so that you can do all the light setup in Cinema 4D. Not sure whether that answers your question?
Re: Crooked aportrait light?
The fact that Indigo is not able exarticulate scenes from obj, fxb, etc, so the scene needs to cook in a 3D package. A standard scene from a package I picked up just for the sample, in order to understand what is not tolerated in Indigo. It turned out that not all light sources are supported in Indigo , and they work differently than in С4D. But to change the world, I can only С4D (or I do not understand or do not know... yet). Indigo I like it very much I gotovo little scene and C4D with GI only prepared it for 12min render! and Indigo calculates it for 12 . But there is a lot of noise((( although light seems to be enough, and I don't understand what's going on..
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- Oscar J
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Re: Crooked aportrait light?
Since you have a 7970 graphics card, you could get a lot better performance if you enable GPU (OpenCL) rendering (maybe one minute instead of 12).
Re: Crooked aportrait light?
Hi bvn,
if you send me the scene file to yves@indigorenderer.com I can have a look why it doesn't translate well to Indigo.
In general, since Indigo is physically based, you can't always expect scene set up for C4Ds renderer to translate perfectly.
if you send me the scene file to yves@indigorenderer.com I can have a look why it doesn't translate well to Indigo.
In general, since Indigo is physically based, you can't always expect scene set up for C4Ds renderer to translate perfectly.
Re: Crooked aportrait light?
I have my stage renderer with GPU - 2-3 min wonderful, but the noise still remains. But now I'm not about that... the problem is that the exposing light in C4D, I guess it's the same light I see in Indigo, but it's not. Perhaps there are some control methods, and configuration of light in the Indigo, but I have about them is not known yet (because I'm just learning... ). Therefore, I propose to pull some kind of "room light", which could be adjusted (to change the position, intensity, direction) already created by lighting and/or add what is missing. Sorry I can't find tutorials for setting up lighting in Indigo (in the help descriptions for setting up lighting almost none).
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Re: Crooked aportrait light?
Are you talking about the scene from the set of C4D (which I showed in the example), or the scene that I create?fused wrote: ↑Tue Jan 02, 2018 9:54 amHi bvn,
if you send me the scene file to yves@indigorenderer.com I can have a look why it doesn't translate well to Indigo.
In general, since Indigo is physically based, you can't always expect scene set up for C4Ds renderer to translate perfectly.
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