- Wed Sep 14, 2005 9:32 pm
#61319
Mihai,
Actually your eye can not see that much of a dynamic range... granted it's 1000:1 or so... which kills photography and video being only a few hundred to one...
No, your brain compensates for your eyesight to such an extent that our crappy little lenses seem almost magical. We only see a degree or so but since we move our point of focus around so quickly our brain builds a picture of the world around us so convincingly that we imagine we see everything in focus, where in fact our focus range is (generously) the size of the moon.
As for contrast and light levels... In a dark room during the day we quickly change our 'exposure' when we glance out the window, however, if you pay careful attention to the room around you while doing so you may see the details of the room suddenly darken. No, unfortunately, though the eye/brain visual system is remarkable it actually isn't too much better then maxwell for dynamic range... in fact an HDRI contains more information then we can see AT ONE TIME, though we can see millions of distinct shades of colour we still can't effectively see light levels spanning several THOUSAND times between dark and light simultaniously.
With Maxwell, generally people are reproducing what camera's can see, though it is much less of a range then we can comfortably see it is done for the same reason CG includes motion blur. Weakness in our own visual system and that of photography convinces us that this 'render' is either a photograph, or reality. Since we don't often see 'reality' outside of reality we should base our renders on the limitations of photography.
In order to match the light levels of outdoors at noon you would need several 1500W spots and various reflectors etc.
In a round-about way this answers the poster's original complaint about maxwell being biased. Maxwell is lighting the scene purely based on the behaviour of light and physics. Our brains don't see the world realistically, we see interpretively. We we lightbalance interiors instantly and since we don't notice the light shift when we look outside, we assume the light levels to be similar... they are not. Outside is often thousands of times brighter then inside. If WE saw the world unbiasedly WE would see the scene identically to what maxwell produces. It's not maxwell that's biased... it's US. So... in order to create a scene that we think is 'realistic' we in fact have to cheat.
I don't mean to be harsh, but the whole thread is based on something which is just plain wrong.
Cheers all.
If we had just one lowly SuperStarDestroyer, all of earth's problems would rapidly become rather trite. I mean, who worries about war in the middle east when a 1.5km death triangle is in orbit.