Light Balancer
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the Light Balancer is an important feature of IRender nXt which lets you quickly adjust light sources - sun, sky and/or artificial lighting - individually to quickly balance the brightness and light balance of your rendering.
- Fully Integrated into the Batch Renderer
You can quickly adjust the intensity of each channel with a slide bar and immediately see the effect on the final rendering. This saves time both in determining the relative intensities to use for light sources and in fine tuning the final image before publication.
While rendering, or after the rendering is completed, you can use the Lighting Channel Wizard to modify the rendered image by changing the intensities of the light channels. You can then adjust the intensity of the light sources, or save the Lighting Channel settings to reuse the same channels in future renderings.
- Quickly adjust the final rendering to get the lighting effects desired.
- Adjust both the sun and sky to create dusk, or nighttime renderings.
- Add 'self glow' to objects - such as TV monitors, or illuminates signs, and adjust them the balance with the rest of the scene.
- Save time by not having to re-render after lighting intensity changes.
To learn more about the Light Balancer, see Light Balancer.
Videos and Tutorials
- [Light Balancer Video]]
- Balanced Lighting Tutorial
Settings
Channels to use
For normal renderings, things will go faster if you use just one channel. (If individual lights are set to values larger than this number, they will be rendered in channel 0)
Default Channels
Default channels are set on the Light Setup tab.
The defaults are:
- Sun: 0
- Sky: 1
- Ceiling Lights: 2
- Other Lights: 3
- Self Glow materials 4
You can changes these default value and/or use the same channels for other lights.
For example, if you are not using Self Glow, you can leave it set to channel 4, but also use channel 4 for other lights.
Individual Lights
There are up to 8 channels available (0 to 7).
You can set specific channels for individual lights.
This can be done when creating the lamp, or as a right click edit once a lamp is placed.
Changing Lighting Channel Intensities
- Click the Lighting Channel Icon at the top of the rendering window.( )
- Name the channels if desired on the dialog.
- Use the sliders to adjust the intensity of various channels.
Normally, when you change the intensity of one Lighting Channel, all other illumination will change to compensate.
Automatic Luminance or Photometrics automatically adjusts the overall intensity of your rendering, much like the automatic exposure on a camera.
If you want to adjust individual channe;s or other items without having Photometrics apply, you can lock the Average Luminance on the Adjustments and Filters Wizard.
See:
Automatic Luminance
Samples
Nighttime Scene
Interior example
This is a model provided by Boothy for use in our documentation and tutorials
Here are 4 scenes from the model using the Light Balancer:
- The original rendering with default channel intensities
- An exterior, sun/sky only rendering
- An nighttime - no sun, dim sky - rendering
- A balanced rendering adjusting various channels.
For more examples of this model, see:
Balanced Lighting Tutorial
Guidelines
This powerful feature allows you to adjust many aspects of the lighting in your rendered image in real-time, after the rendering has been produced. This is accomplished by allowing you to create up to 8 lighting “channels” in the image. Each light source in the drawing, including the sun and sky, can be assigned to a channel. Once this image is rendered and saved, each channel can be individually scaled in the nXt Image Editor. For example, using this capability, you can produce day and night interiors with a single rendering. The following five steps are necessary to produce and manipulate a multi-channel image:
- You must tell nXt how many channels you want. Go to
Lights Setup Tab
and set the number desired from 1 to 8, or check the "Use all Channels" checkbox.
(Each additional channel you add requires an additional 12 bytes per pixel internally. This is a lot of memory, particularly for high resolution renderings. It may not be possible to complete your rendering on a 32 bit system.) - You must turn on all of the participating lights. Lights which are off will not contribute to the image and will not be scalable. Because you are rendering with more lights, it may take a little longer.
- You must tell each light source which channel it belongs to. By default, Sun and Sky are set to channels 0 and 1, artificial lights to channels 2 and 3. You can changes these defaults on the Lights Setup Tab. You can also set channels individually for each light. Valid channels are 0-7.
Overall Luminance
If you uncheck Allow changes to make image brighter or darker, then as you adjust the brightness of a channel, Automatic Luminance will compensate to keep the overall brightness of the scene constant. If you leave it checked, then the overall scene wlll get brighter or darker as you adjust the lights.
The Brightness control will adjust the overall brightness of the image.
If you're trying to do a night and day exterior using the same rendering, you will almost certainly need to adjust the brightness down for the night time scene.
See also
- Light Setup tab
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