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    Help! Interior scenes - lights too bright or room too dark

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    • D Offline
      dingobruce
      last edited by

      I've been having some issues for a long time with interior scenes and finally thought it was time to ask on here for your advice on interior lighting. I find it impossible to achieve good overall lighting without having VRAY lights burning out.

      See these two attached examples.
      Lights in Scene:

      Strip light: VRay Rectangle Light (intensity 20 (scalar))
      Pool Lights: 2 X IES (power 50,000)

      The first is rendered with the following:

      Shutter Speed: 20
      F Number: 8
      Film ISO: 100

      Too dark

      This image has nice lighting, but the overall image is too dark.

      The second is rendered with the following:

      Shutter Speed: 20
      F Number: 8
      Film ISO: 400

      Too light

      The overall lighting is much better but the lights are burnt out.

      How do I achieve balance! Look forward to advice from you guys!

      Thanks,

      Dingo Bruce.

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      • V Offline
        valerostudio
        last edited by

        There is no magic button. You have to light a scene the way you would in real life. Fixtures with IES lights, windows letting in sunlight, maybe you even setup a few rectangular lights behind your camera as additional lighting, the same way a photographer would.

        Link Preview Image
        How To: Mix Light Sources to Warm Up an Interior Photo

        Juxtapose warm-toned and cool-toned lighting to capture a room's sunny feel

        favicon

        Popular Photography (www.popphoto.com)

        http://www.cg-blog.com/index.php/2012/09/04/living-light-balance.htm

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        • kimi kimiK Offline
          kimi kimi
          last edited by

          I think if you go to Color mapping, choose HSV Exponential, you can play a little bit with dark and bright multiplier to get a better result. And there is always Photoshop to assist you further.

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          • HornOxxH Offline
            HornOxx
            last edited by

            @valerostudio said:

            There is no magic button. You have to light a scene the way you would in real life. Fixtures with IES lights, windows letting in sunlight, maybe you even setup a few rectangular lights behind your camera as additional lighting, the same way a photographer would.

            Link Preview Image
            How To: Mix Light Sources to Warm Up an Interior Photo

            Juxtapose warm-toned and cool-toned lighting to capture a room's sunny feel

            favicon

            Popular Photography (www.popphoto.com)

            http://www.cg-blog.com/index.php/2012/09/04/living-light-balance.htm

            πŸ˜‰
            I like the clear and simple way how you have expressed this.
            Your three sentences should be the introduction for each lighting chapter of any Render Tool.

            However, I would like such a "magic button"

            never trust a skinny cook

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