- Wed May 11, 2005 2:50 pm
#24001
1mm stays 1mm all the way: But I wanted the object to take scale to the new unit, 1mm becomes 1cm, 1cm becomes 1 m, 1m becomes 1km is it clear now: and vice versa
The light setting (camera aperture) was done when the scene was in km units.
Going down, just shows that when the objects get smaller and smaller and if you don't change the camera aperture the scene gets darker.
Obviously the distance of the camera is proportionally constant to the objects.
I am sure that if you start your settings with microns and keep them all the way to kilometers the final scene will be completely overexposed
I was trying to prove nothing, it is just a small experiment I wanted to share
And what about slow shutter speeds, like 15 seconds
do you have an
Exactly Thomas,You should say "YES" to that prompt.
Rhino is scaling it so as to keep it the same size under the new unit system.
1mm stays 1mm all the way: But I wanted the object to take scale to the new unit, 1mm becomes 1cm, 1cm becomes 1 m, 1m becomes 1km is it clear now: and vice versa
The light setting (camera aperture) was done when the scene was in km units.
Going down, just shows that when the objects get smaller and smaller and if you don't change the camera aperture the scene gets darker.
Obviously the distance of the camera is proportionally constant to the objects.
I am sure that if you start your settings with microns and keep them all the way to kilometers the final scene will be completely overexposed
I was trying to prove nothing, it is just a small experiment I wanted to share
I have been using 24x36 reflex cameras for the last 36 years and I'm used to it. But why not design a flexible input and please every bodyI think the cameras are confusing and counterintuitive and Maxwell is good
And what about slow shutter speeds, like 15 seconds
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