- Tue Dec 04, 2012 8:38 pm
#363224
I have found something interesting, and want to share with you:
Playing arround with transparent (or invisible) plain emiter, I found that certain colours might get into conflict with the transparency.
The material I am talking about would be a plain emiter, assigned on a polygonn that would be hidden to camera. The result is a light source that would render invisible.
Of course if we want this light not to be noticeable we must hide iit from reflections too.
I found that if the emiter colour of such a light (in HSV system) has a saturation under 127 it will render totally invisible, but if I use a saturation over 128 it gets visible under certain circumstances.
My gess is that this could be realistic.
I am not sure the reason, but suspect that real emiters cannot be too saturated since they will not be emitters. I imagine that a totally saturated (for instance) red glass, could not be transparent, but visible.
Anyway I am just guessiing.
The only I know is that if you want a really transparent emiter , you must use a colour that would not be that saturated.
Ernesto
Playing arround with transparent (or invisible) plain emiter, I found that certain colours might get into conflict with the transparency.
The material I am talking about would be a plain emiter, assigned on a polygonn that would be hidden to camera. The result is a light source that would render invisible.
Of course if we want this light not to be noticeable we must hide iit from reflections too.
I found that if the emiter colour of such a light (in HSV system) has a saturation under 127 it will render totally invisible, but if I use a saturation over 128 it gets visible under certain circumstances.
My gess is that this could be realistic.
I am not sure the reason, but suspect that real emiters cannot be too saturated since they will not be emitters. I imagine that a totally saturated (for instance) red glass, could not be transparent, but visible.
Anyway I am just guessiing.
The only I know is that if you want a really transparent emiter , you must use a colour that would not be that saturated.
Ernesto