Rayscaper, My trip down the road to adjumacation.
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@Mike-Amos said in Rayscaper, My trip down the road to adjumacation.:
wy selecting metal results in losing the ability to adjust colour as is the case with plastic etc.
Rayscaper exposes various shaders to the user to help create realistic and accurate materials.
Its Disney Shader is an Uber Shader that has a 'capture all' approach. But the dedicated Plastic and Metal shaders are for scenarios where you need to create a more physically correct material.
You can't colour metal in the traditional sense because other factors influence a metallic colour. In the next Rayscaper I believe he is including a physically correct Metal library
Metallic colouring is achieved by having correct IOR and Absorption values
Rather than doing the maths and twiddling the dials the next release should give you a base to build on.
But in this instance for your fridge I'd use the Disney shader with metallic at 1.0 and Roughness at 0.1 to 0.25
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Thanks Rich, I knew I was missing something simple. Sometimes being told that the entity has no material assigined when in fact it does. Not every time but now more frequent.
The no material assigned report is referring to the blue chairs (Beanbag) but changing the mat in sketchup does nothing.
Rendered fine in the first image.
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@Mike-Amos Since the viewport zooming/panning update I've noticed that behaviour.
I tend to use the material list to pick materials because its not giving me a sense of security picking materials from the render viewport.
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Hey @Mike-Amos ,
As @Rich-O-Brien mentioned, the metal material is a physically correct metal shader. So, there's no accurate artistic control. Rich made a metal library available, and I will also put that in the next release. For complete artistic control, the Disney material is what you want.
I will have a look at the picking bug. Out of curiosity, is the material directly painted on the faces, or is it painted on the object?
Cheers,
Thomas -
@pixelcruncher it seems that the HDRI image is also pixly, so maybe adding an "upscaling" option to make low-res images, smooth, would be nicen
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When I mention colur of a metal I am talking abouyt the change in colour when 'metal' is chosen as a finish but, still early days yet.
At the moment an automatic colour change turns what I want to be chrome becomes brass or bronze with no method of changing/preventing that.
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@majid said in Rayscaper, My trip down the road to adjumacation.:
@pixelcruncher it seems that the HDRI image is also pixly, so maybe adding an "upscaling" option to make low-res images, smooth, would be nicen
That's a good idea; I will put it in my backlog. edit: It would not necessarily be upscaling because that might result in quality loss. I would add texture filtering to blur away those offensive pixelation artifacts, similar to what is done in games.
Note that if you are using the HDRI from the asset library (which is sourced from PolyHaven), you can choose to increase the default resolution:
You need to restart SketchUp for the change to take effect. Increasing the resolution will also increase the download time for the asset.
Cheers,
Thomas -
@Mike-Amos said in Rayscaper, My trip down the road to adjumacation.:
When I mention colur of a metal I am talking abouyt the change in colour when 'metal' is chosen as a finish but, still early days yet.
At the moment an automatic colour change turns what I want to be chrome becomes brass or bronze with no method of changing/preventing that.
Hey @Mike-Amos
I'm not sure I'm following the when metal is chosen as finish - do you mind providing some more info or a screenshot?
Cheers,
Thomas -
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Nice render, but the interior could do with some extra lights. Very interesting stairs, never saw that before. Was this done in Rayscaper?
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This is my Rayscaper thread so, yes, in Rascaper.
There are 8 lights in that scene which should be OK along with an EXR.
I would like to have a better, more informative method of identifying the lights being adjusted. Several are candles so the light has to be reduced for that. Perhaps a designator on the scree would help.
Basically I am finding any real adjustment difficult to near impossible due to not being able to read the dialogue boxes. I will have at some stage to acquire a nother monitor but that will do nothing to fix this issue.
TBH, while I render architectural pieces, I do not DO architectural renders. I have a leaning towards more realistic lighting levels which is out of synch with folk who want "More lights on everything".
The stairs are more commonly found on yachts and small boats and are a space saving measure. Not popular with architectural purists who will simply say that "Never get that past inspection in America, etc".
I know, a bit like those who want fridge freezers in a kitchen boxed in for the same reason. Not doing architectural renders and NOT in America let alone actually expecting these things to be built.
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@Mike-Amos @Rich-O-Brien - The latest release should resolve the material/camera picking issues. Can you confirm that?
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This is my Rayscaper thread so, yes, in Rascaper.
Makes sense, I didn't want to assume
There are 8 lights in that scene which should be OK along with an EXR.
I would like to have a better, more informative method of identifying the lights being adjusted. Several are candles so the light has to be reduced for that. Perhaps a designator on the scree would help.
That's a good idea. Overlaying the viewport with some widgets to indicate the lights. I will put it on my roadmap.
Basically I am finding any real adjustment difficult to near impossible due to not being able to read the dialogue boxes. I will have at some stage to acquire a nother monitor but that will do nothing to fix this issue.
This is good feedback. What is your display resolution, and are you using display scaling? I don't think Rayscaper respects display scaling right now, but I have to check the documentation of the user interface library I am using.
TBH, while I render architectural pieces, I do not DO architectural renders. I have a leaning towards more realistic lighting levels which is out of synch with folk who want "More lights on everything".
Gotcha!
The stairs are more commonly found on yachts and small boats and are a space saving measure. Not popular with architectural purists who will simply say that "Never get that past inspection in America, etc".
I know, a bit like those who want fridge freezers in a kitchen boxed in for the same reason. Not doing architectural renders and NOT in America let alone actually expecting these things to be built.
No worries, I wasn't criticizing; I was just curious about the staircase.
Cheers,
Thomas -
G'day mate,
The monitor is set at 2560 x 1330 at the moment. Good enough for most tasks.No criticism taken mate, we are discussing the topic and it's all good. Just covering off the things I do rather idiosynchratically. Being a 'do things my own way' personality.
I am getting to grips with Rayscaper, it's taking a bit of adjustment from the ol' noggin but getting there bit by bit. Well worth the time tbh.
Something that might help the screen issue I feel is in the way would be on demand dialogue boxes to reduce screen 'clutter'.
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Wow! That is well done!
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Thanks mate, some mat changes and a better hdr for the scene will help.
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@Mike-Amos Very well done. I'm pleased to see you are getting good results.
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The monitor is set at 2560 x 1330 at the moment. Good enough for most tasks.
Do you also use display scaling, or is it at 100%? Also, do other applications behave well? A screenshot might help us see how it compares to other applications.
I am getting to grips with Rayscaper, it's taking a bit of adjustment from the ol' noggin but getting there bit by bit. Well worth the time tbh.
Great to hear!
Something that might help the screen issue I feel is in the way would be on demand dialogue boxes to reduce screen 'clutter'.
In the latest release, I'm trying to hide more things, especially if they are not enabled. But can I hide even more things? Is there any screen in particular that is bothering you?
Cheers,
Thomas
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