User avatar
By iker
#16750
Post-image:

Image

Original caustic detail:


Image

Question:
I'm not using caustic layers, what are those white little spots then? :shock:
User avatar
By abgrafx3d
#16753
iker - very nice product shot :shock:

Maybe the little spots are just noise - not really sure.
User avatar
By iker
#16788
Thanks to all

abgrafx3d & Thomas An: Thanks so much, great honour coming from you both :wink:

Mike. : the black material is a Maxwell Plastic with 0.8 of Rouhgness, and rendertime is 8 hours ( some noise has been removed in post-procesing, dielectrics in Rhino are still slow because for the moment you can't control the Abbe number like Maya or Max for example ).

znouza: Thanks, there's no textures on the scene, just "splitted surfaces" :wink:
User avatar
By oscarMaxwell
#16791
Nice render iker. These spots seem to be noise coming from the glossy plastic.

Best regards.
By pavel59
#16810
Very nice job Iker.
I'm trying to replicate a similar scene, as a first experience with Maxwell,
could you please give some more details about the scene ?
For ex. trasparent material, lights position and values, camera settings and so far ?

Thanks in advance and compliments again.

Paolo
User avatar
By iker
#16821
Thanks pavel59, my settings are:

-Skydome :
Intensity=100
Color=158,198,255

-3 Emitters
1 Coolwhite
2 D65

-Camera:
FStop=12
Shutterspeed=30

-Glass:
Crown BSC1

-Plastics:
All with Roughness 0.8 except white cap for the bottle Roughness 0.1

And the light setup:
Image
By pavel59
#16831
Thanks, really a lot.
I will give it a try.
My settings were not too different, however something wasn't convincing.
I will check the differences now and try the new ones.

I hope to post something nice soon.

Have a nice weekend

Paolo
User avatar
By tom
#16841
:shock: beautiful setup!
yeah they are coming from rough parameters...
User avatar
By iker
#16862
Thanks so much Oscar and tom! :D
User avatar
By Thomas An.
#16868
iker,

A multiple choice question (if you do not mind of course):

Is the liquid/glass interface:
1. two seprate solids with coincident surfaces ?
2. a single surface ?
3. Two seperate objects microscopically offset from each other ?

-
User avatar
By iker
#16877
Thomas, liquid and glass are different surfaces ( liquid doesn't match exactly with the interior of the glass, is 0.05 smaller ).
....so it's answer 3-Two separated objects microscopically offset from each other.
By yadikrisnadi
#16892
Hi Iker, great rendering.

Yadi
OutDoor Scenery Question

you said: After you apply the image to the polygo[…]

fixed! thank you - customer support! -Ed