What am I doing wrong with the adjust sunlight?


bdillard1
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Go to solution Solved by ericepv,

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Hello,

 

I'm sure it is simple but no matter what number I change this to the light through the windows seems the same (BRIGHT)

image.thumb.png.d27cb30182bfee6990ae220b3b1c36a6.png

 

image.thumb.png.adb22ab42239d640bfe23331f9d46676.png

image.thumb.png.cdeeada7c378c4a892b964432b980648.png

 

Use sun angle drop down is unavailable as well as edit  - I imagine that is because I haven't selected a plot or the orientation of the house.

image.thumb.png.d93ad0b483b32b32b16667a768bd655c.png

 

The only thing I can do to make it darker outside is toggle sunlight.

 

image.thumb.png.c285c1cca1508001d4fc15180ada0e6c.png

 

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Go to 'Rendering Techniques Options' and in the 'Physically Based Rendering' tab (his looks like a PBR) reduce the 'Daytime Backdrop Intensity'. I find that a setting between 200 and 500 works best. Also, make sure your sunlight 'Intensity' (in the 'Adjust Sunlight' DBX) is set for a lower value (usually 5000 - 15,000 works well).

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1 hour ago, bdillard1 said:

I imagine that is because I haven't selected a plot or the orientation of the house.

 

It's because you haven't placed a Sun Angle Arrow  (Line Dropdown)  but it's not necessarily needed....unless doing Sun studies.

 

M.

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Just a bit of follow-up no what Eric said about the backdrop intensity.

 

What I find is that at times it can be helpful to drop the backdrop intensity even below 200 in some circumstances.  No specific recommendation, just lower it a bit and do a test until the image cleans up.

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2 hours ago, ericepv said:

Go to 'Rendering Techniques Options' and in the 'Physically Based Rendering' tab (his looks like a PBR) reduce the 'Daytime Backdrop Intensity'. I find that a setting between 200 and 500 works best. Also, make sure your sunlight 'Intensity' (in the 'Adjust Sunlight' DBX) is set for a lower value (usually 5000 - 15,000 works well).

Thanks - just tried - no difference on mine.  Maybe I missed something.

image.thumb.png.065830022040103459a51000fc8629a4.png

image.thumb.png.0edad9621030face85342905408f2eae.png

 

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 I made a few adjustments:

 

Camera settings - Turn off Bloom, Set Ambient Occlusion to 25%, Set lighting for 'Default Light Set'

Rendering Techniques - In Std tab set Ambient to 0. In PBR, set 'Camera Exposure' to .15, 'Daytime backdrop Intensity' to 25.

 

Nutella.thumb.jpg.d5a155138f84ad85ec11fd310090d796.jpg

 

This should get you started. From here, you can adjust the lighting, sunlight and shadows and also work on your material properties.

Hope this helps -Eric

 

 

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bdillard1

 

Do you mind following up on this render to show others what you have found that works best for this particular render?

 

The reason I ask is that it is this type of situation that can be most helpful to others who are also trying to learn Chief's rendering tools.

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For anyone who is struggling with PBR, take a look at this video from the Knowledge base:

 

https://www.chiefarchitect.com/videos/watch/2426/physically-based-rendering-technique.html

 

These videos provide a lot of great tips on how to set up for the best results. The ones on lighting and materials are especially helpful;

 

https://www.chiefarchitect.com/videos/playlists/103/ray-trace.html

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