I am trying to render some images for a work project and unfortunately there are some shadows that are appearing on the tank of the image that I would prefer not to be there. These shadows appear only on some of the rendered images, and I have been rendering using "Current lighting" setting, so I am confused why the images would look different. I have been checking the forums trying to see if there is a way to edit the current lighting style, but I did not find anything. Any help on this would be highly appreciated as this is delaying the progress of this particular project. I have attached an image of the system with the good lighting and one with the lighting that has the unwanted shadows (both using the "current lighting" style).
Thank you
http://help.autodesk.com/view/INVLT/2014/ENU/?guid=GUID-CD7AE61B-8796-48AD-9A5F-B7A4B1F399D8
Hi,
this ar abviusly two different modeles rendered.
Please post assemblies. It is impossible to tell anything not having them.
also please specify exactly what settings you have when you render.
From my experience this light styles do not quite work intuitiv. Had some problems with them.
Cris.
OK
than please make copies of this assemblies.
Remove most of parts, just leave some to produce shadows and post those.
Cris.
@Anonymous wrote:
I would have to make adjustments to the "Current Lighting" lighting style, but I don't know how I can go about doing that.
No need to post your assemblies at all IMO...
Read the link I posted. It tells you exactly how to modify lighting in the studio environment.
OR.. many of us are simply doing "renderings" directly from the iam environment by setting "Visual Style" to "realistic" and then turning on "raytracing".
Those are in the view tab..appearance section.
You also have control over shadows,etc.. there. IMO "Studio" is just about dead/obsolete as you can get faster/same quality images simply using raytracing and not even going into the studio environment at all.
@Anonymous wrote:
I tried playing around with the realistic visual style and I like the way that looks, and a lot easier. How would I go about getting the image file? Would it be just a screen shot?
My fav is the snipping tool that comes with Windows now (7 and on I believe)
or you can simply "save copy as" to a png or other suitable image format.
I typically turn off the 3d indicator (tools..application options..display tab.. uncheck "Show origin 3d indicator" ) so it doesn't show up in your images and I will usually set the color scheme to "presentation" to get a nice white background.
as to your second question.. I'm fairly sure that (been a while since I used studio) "Current lighting" is the "active" (made active by right clicking on it in the list) lighting style from the "Lighting Styles" in studio. (the lighting styles button in the scene section of the ribbon)
I find a simple way to start to figure out whats going on is to just make one of the lights pink or similar to it clearly stands out..
and don't forget you can change "raytracing" (not using studio) to get "better" or "best" quality which will increase the anti-aliasing and take the "grain" out of it.
You can get just as good if not better images from simply raytracing. Studio is just about useless now 🙂 (assuming you don't do animation)
There are some issues that are occuring when changing the visual style. Some of the components appear to be a different color, and some different shadows are appearing now. Fortunately this was where I found the location of the current lighting, and I made copies and have been playing around with them, however, I have not found a solution to the color change. Any help with this would be appreciated.
Thank you,
Shawn
@Anonymous wrote:
There are some issues that are occuring when changing the visual style. Some of the components appear to be a different color, and some different shadows are appearing now. Fortunately this was where I found the location of the current lighting, and I made copies and have been playing around with them, however, I have not found a solution to the color change. Any help with this would be appreciated.
Thank you,
Shawn
Lighting effects colors.. simple as that. Just like real world. Different lighting makes colors look different.
Please don't write off Inventor Studio just yet.
IMHO it's neither obsolete nor useless - I for one, quite like using it 😉
Where there's a will, there's a way - here's just a quick example done in Studio (attached).
(Not sure this was good enough to make it into the Friday Pics, so never sent it there before)
That looks really good! What set up did you do for that? Custom lighting? I was able to get a better image with studio by removing some of the lights and adjusting their intensity level, but still not perfect.
Shawn
Hi Shawn,
There is no easy way for me to explain everything in a short post.
If you're able to send me the files (i guess too large to post here), I'll try and find a setting that works well for you. I use PDSU 2014.
My email is dvofficemail at gmail dot com
We can share the results here and discuss afterwards, for the benefit of the group.
Regards,
Danny
I've found the best way to get good renderings is to understand all the settings with lighting and colors and learn to edit/modify them.
Then pick 1 aspect you don't like and start adjusting till you do.. Then pick the next and on and on..
It really is a trial/error thing.