Copied from Ashundar forums (if you look there, no need to look here):
Here's my latest render, it only took 8 hours...
For some reason the trees and foreground are a lot darker than they appeared in photoshop. I'll have to manually brighten them up/re-render.
I'm also not sure what's going on with the ray colouring in this pic, could it be because I rendered using Oshyan's fill light set up?
Anyway, any crits? Suggestions?
I like the clouds and (slightly) multicolored rays.
As for the darkness: maybe increase the gamma in the camera?
Helen
Quote from: helentr on March 14, 2007, 12:07:15 PM
I like the clouds and (slightly) multicolored rays.
As for the darkness: maybe increase the gamma in the camera?
Helen
I agree about the clouds and rays. Increasing the gamma in the camera will require a re-render. Any decent graphics program will have enough controls to brighten that image up.
Well I was counting on a re-render anyway, this is only a WIP.
If you save in EXR format, you can open that in photoshop and just adjust the exposure. Since it's a HDR format it won't decrease the quality.
hi!
adding a second sun could help here too, when it has low strength and 'cast shadows' , 'glow in atmosphere' and maybe 'visible disc' depending on the sun's heading, are deactivated.
when you re-render anyways, worth a try i'd say ;)
the clouds and the rays are really good as they are, loosing this special look because you change gamma or exposure, would be a pity imho.
cheers...
3Dguy, I don't think you have to save in the EXR format to adjust the exposure (well, i've got CS2 and I don't have to, not sure about earlier versions)
EXR format has far greater dynamic range (it's a HDR format) than a BMP file. Try it. Render a dark scene. Save 2 versions and lighten the BMP version and adjust the exposure of the EXR version. You'll see the difference. That is because the BMP version is just one representation of all the exposure levels contained in the EXR version.