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    Stained glass

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    • V Offline
      valerostudio
      last edited by

      Any tricks out there for taking a stained glass image texture and get the light to project through it on to a wall?

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      • soloS Offline
        solo
        last edited by

        Check this challenge out, not sure if any vray entries (never looked) if yes why not pm that person and ask for help.

        http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=81&t=19778&hilit=stained+glass

        http://www.solos-art.com

        If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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        • V Offline
          valerostudio
          last edited by

          I am shocked to see that Vray cannot do this (using a material) I am going to have to model the window and glass. Dang!

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          • andybotA Offline
            andybot
            last edited by

            @valerostudio - I posted a working stained glass render in that thread. It does work as long as you put the color map in the refraction layer.

            http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=81&t=19778&start=45#p345712

            http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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            • V Offline
              valerostudio
              last edited by

              I modeled a window with a bunch of tiny pieces, all the glass parts are 3D with a 1/2" thickness and the faces are oriented correctly, but when I render it using a colored glass material (color is set under the fog), it doesn't render with any color. I tried to crank up the color multiplier as high as 10.0 and that didnt work either. I replaced the window with a solid pane glass using the same material and that rendered correctly. So the question is, does the overall size of the piece of glass effect it's ability to be colored? Now I know that thickness would affect it, but I didn't think the area size of the piece would.


              Stained Glass Testing.jpg

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              • andybotA Offline
                andybot
                last edited by

                Try setting the refraction "color" option instead of fog. I believe fog does have to do with volume, which may be why the small pieces don't cast color.

                http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                • V Offline
                  valerostudio
                  last edited by

                  That worked! Now, is this a 'cheat'? I've learned in the past that you want to use fog for colored glass. I have never used the color setting in this fashion to achieve colored glass.

                  @andybot said:

                  Try setting the refraction "color" option instead of fog. I believe fog does have to do with volume, which may be why the small pieces don't cast color.

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                  • andybotA Offline
                    andybot
                    last edited by

                    Not sure I understand it all myself. I would guess that different properties are affected. The "color" option affects light coming through, and fog affects the appearance.

                    http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                    • EarthMoverE Offline
                      EarthMover
                      last edited by

                      The Fog Color slot is intended to color refracting surfaces at a gradient from the thickest areas receiving a darkest fog color and thinner areas receiving a lighter fog color. It works best within curved glass surfaces such as bottles, wine glasses etc. Since a flat plane window has no varying thickness the fog will not color the glass. In that case the refraction color is the only option that will tint the glass properly.

                      You can test it by trying the same material out on curved surface.

                      3D Artist at Clearstory 3D Imaging
                      Guide Tool at Winning With Sketchup
                      Content Creator at Skapeup

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                      • andybotA Offline
                        andybot
                        last edited by

                        Thanks - that's helpful to know. I actually saw the gradient effect when I tried to use fog on car glass, now it makes sense why it's supposed to be like that. (so fog color is a "cheat" already πŸ˜‰ )

                        http://charlottesvillearchitecturalrendering.com/

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                        • R Offline
                          rspierenburg
                          last edited by

                          Well I believe the Fog slot was meant to represent the phenomena of seeing thick glass on edge, the iron in the glass absorbs the infra-red and ultra-violet making it look green. http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080308120406AAfKk3m so its not really a cheat per se.

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                          • V Offline
                            valerostudio
                            last edited by

                            This is all great information. Thanks guys. I will post the render when I wrap up a good draft.

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                            • V Offline
                              valerostudio
                              last edited by

                              So I did not want to give up on the fog issue yet because this is how Fernando has always said you color glass. I made a series of glass boxes using a blue fog color. The front row starts at 1' thick on the left and works its way down to 2" thick. The panes in the back are 1/2" thick and half in size as they move left.


                              FogTest01.jpg

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                              • V Offline
                                valerostudio
                                last edited by

                                Here is the test render. This uses color set in the refraction because fog would not work at all.


                                Chapel_Test.jpg

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                                • V Offline
                                  valerostudio
                                  last edited by

                                  Wrapped up the rendering


                                  Chapel.jpg

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                                  • V Offline
                                    valerostudio
                                    last edited by

                                    More tonal adjustments in Photoshop. This is the final image.


                                    Chapel_Final.jpg

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