- Thu Sep 10, 2009 10:11 am
#307274

I've had a situation where I had a bottle of soap lying on the side, and wanted to capture the look of the caught air bubble in the top. One way would be to drill a tiny hole through the glass/plastic surface an "let the air in to the cavity, and another would be to just leave the shape of the cavity enclosed in the glass, much like the liquid mass, and then assign an AIR material to it.
What would such an Air material look like to behave just like the "default air in maxwell space"?
Hope I made myself clear, I can illustrate if needed!
Best regards,
- Björn

I've had a situation where I had a bottle of soap lying on the side, and wanted to capture the look of the caught air bubble in the top. One way would be to drill a tiny hole through the glass/plastic surface an "let the air in to the cavity, and another would be to just leave the shape of the cavity enclosed in the glass, much like the liquid mass, and then assign an AIR material to it.
What would such an Air material look like to behave just like the "default air in maxwell space"?
Hope I made myself clear, I can illustrate if needed!
Best regards,
- Björn
industrial design and visualization (http://www.syse.se)