- Wed Oct 14, 2009 8:00 pm
#311887

A typical Maxwell emitter - light goes everywhere.

An eggcrate gridded emitter - light is restricted to more parallel rays. Shadows are sharper. Sides of room are darker.
If an emitter had a 'roughness' or 'randomness' slider then the rays could be made more and more parallel. This is commonly done in studios to prevent too much light from spreading all over the place and ruining the drama of the shot. When you grid a light, you lose a lot of rays. If you redirect those rays with a parabola or a fresnel lens then you still get parallel rays, but you retain more brightness.

http://www.digitalartform.com/archives/ ... th_eg.html
A typical Maxwell emitter - light goes everywhere.
An eggcrate gridded emitter - light is restricted to more parallel rays. Shadows are sharper. Sides of room are darker.
If an emitter had a 'roughness' or 'randomness' slider then the rays could be made more and more parallel. This is commonly done in studios to prevent too much light from spreading all over the place and ruining the drama of the shot. When you grid a light, you lose a lot of rays. If you redirect those rays with a parabola or a fresnel lens then you still get parallel rays, but you retain more brightness.

http://www.digitalartform.com/archives/ ... th_eg.html




- By Jochen Haug