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    Depth of field with physical camera

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved V-Ray
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    • GaieusG Offline
      Gaieus
      last edited by

      No, if it is a V-ray question, this would be the right place. Hopefully someone more knowledgeable than me will see the post and can answer.

      Gai...

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      • andybotA Offline
        andybot
        last edited by

        hi giulia,

        DOF can be tricky. In exterior scenes where you are far away, DOF is deep by its nature. It will only show up if there are objects very close to you (for example 1 meter or less) Also, you can turn down the GI and background multiplier so you can have a small f-number. You can override the focal length to use a larger length (achieve shallower DOF)

        http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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        • ATLAStudioA Offline
          ATLAStudio
          last edited by

          Trying to get the hang of these settings just now and found your post, you can unlock the DoF aperture parameter by switching off the physical camera at the 'On' button. After you change the aperture switch the camera back on, the setting is preserved. There's probably a good reason for this but I certainly don't know what it is. Test is hdr GI with exposure turned off, DoF aperture 0.5, focal distance 40.0.


          dof_test_001.jpg

          http://www.atlas-studio.co.uk

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          • fuzzionF Offline
            fuzzion
            last edited by

            Beautiful answer. I have actually given up on DOF with outdoor scenes 😒

            "Only the dead have seen the end of war" - Plato

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            • panixiaP Offline
              panixia
              last edited by

              i strongly suggest to render the z-depht channel and then put it in the alpha channel spot in photoshop so you can use it as an alpha channel for lens blur.
              simple and effective.
              moreover it seriously decrease the render time, and most important to me is that this workaround allows you to do a single render and quickly create countless variation in PS without having to render it countless time.
              in photoshop also you have a real-time preview of what are you doing in terms of strenght and radius of blurriness.

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              • V Offline
                valerostudio
                last edited by

                +1 on ZDepth channel. Much more flexible and faster render times.

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                • andybotA Offline
                  andybot
                  last edited by

                  except for the slight problem of reflections...

                  http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                  • panixiaP Offline
                    panixia
                    last edited by

                    mmm.. why? πŸ˜•

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                    • andybotA Offline
                      andybot
                      last edited by

                      Take a look at the countertop in this example. The doors and trees beyond are not blurred when using the mask because the reflection is not calculated in the zdepth pass.


                      mats_test26_vrayDOF1-mask.jpg

                      http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                      • V Offline
                        valerostudio
                        last edited by

                        Oh, that's a good one. This is very interesting.

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                        • panixiaP Offline
                          panixia
                          last edited by

                          ah ok.. never noticed it before.. 😳
                          very intersting..

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                          • M Offline
                            monkers
                            last edited by

                            Has anyone managed to work this out for large scenes?

                            I have a job in large scene and I would like to blur out the background in Vray.

                            I have tried the Z-depth work around but it blurs out details in the foreground - I know with a bit of photoshopping this could be fixed. But I would rather just batch render over night.

                            Heres some images of my scenes

                            Without DOF

                            http://imgur.com/n4tByGb

                            With DOF from zdepth see how the crane detail blurs out.

                            http://imgur.com/Abimfzg

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                            • M Offline
                              monkers
                              last edited by

                              I managed to figure this out if anyone is interested here's the settings i used

                              http://i.imgur.com/MWydbaf.png

                              the result.

                              http://i.imgur.com/PKgtDaU.jpg

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