Dark interior of the buliding with exterior rendering
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Hello, I have a question about exterior rendering. My problem is a dark light inside the house.
I don't know is that normal or not?
I'm working on sketchup + vray from about 3 months, and I'm learning all the time new things. Before exterior render I've done some project with interior renders with good results I think
What I've learned is that the exterior and interior renders need different light settings (camera, and so on)
So my question is: the lightening inside of the building can only be achieved by inserting there a source light like rectangle lights? - what I've done in this renders below.
Is there other option (maybe in vray sets) to light up some interior?
I'm using sketchup 2013 + vray 2.0
That's my main sets of vray:Camera: Shutter speed 250 / ISO 100 / F-number 8,0
Environment: GI 1,0 (sun) / Background 1,0 (sun) / Reflection - HDRI file
DMC sampler: adaptive amount: 0,85 / Noise threshold: 0,008 / Min samples 12
Color mapping: Reinhard - Burn valee decreaed to 0,8
Inderict illumination (GI) - Turned on Ambient Oclussion -> amount 0,8 / subdivs 32 / radius 10
Irradiance map: min -4 / max -1I think that's the most important vray sets
That's strange because I've wade through a massive number of tutorials about sketchup vray, about alone vray, etc and didn't find the answer about it

Some pictures of my test - low sets renders
1st - with a curtain and rect light in face of it to light it up because it was very dark
2nd - render with inserting rect light across inside the width of the house
3rd - render without any source of light in house.Sorry for my english and regards




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Well I think this reflects real life photography as well. On bright sunny days, the exposure outside will be a lot brighter than inside (assuming no major sunlamps inside). The range of exposure for a camera (aka rendering) is a lot lower than the human eye. So if I were sitting outside the window looking in I would personally see something similar to Picture 2. But if I were to take a photograph of it, it would probably look more like Picture 3.
Rob
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