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LightWorks Sun

Dwight
Newcomer
Has anyone managed to make a soft shadowed LightWorks sun uising the native sun rather than the SunObject?

If so, can you post the extreme comparison?

Lets just confirm that all of those sliders aren't actually connected to anything.
Dwight Atkinson
18 REPLIES 18
Ben Odonnell
Contributor
Dwight,
Have tried it many a time but to no avail. It seems that if you want soft shadows you need to use the Lightworks sun object.

Cheers.
Ben
Ben O'Donnell
Architect and CTO at BIMobject®
Get your BIM objects from bimobject.com
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Ben wrote:
Have tried it many a time but to no avail. It seems that if you want soft shadows you need to use the Lightworks sun object.
Same experience.

Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier   •   macOS Sequoia 15.2, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Dwight
Newcomer
Okay.
Graphisoft says the effect is subtle.
Too subtle for me.
Just to confirm, since playing with light, is an exercise in my… book…

Left is hard sun 500% strength no ambient.
Right is sun as soft as it can be made, 500% strength no ambient.

Can anybody see a difference?
Dwight Atkinson
fuzzytnth3
Booster
If you overlay the two renderings in Photoshop by copying and pasting onto a new layer. Then use the Invert command in the Adjustment menu and finally change the top layer mode to Multiply then what is left is the difference between the two images.

As Graphisoft say it's a very slight difference
AC versions 3.41 to 25 (UKI Full 5005).
Using AC25 5005 UKI FULL
Mac OSX 10.15.7 (19G2021) Mac Pro-2013 32gbRam AMD FirePro D500 3072 MB graphics
fuzzytnth3
Booster
Another way to look at the same image is to set the Layer mode to Difference
AC versions 3.41 to 25 (UKI Full 5005).
Using AC25 5005 UKI FULL
Mac OSX 10.15.7 (19G2021) Mac Pro-2013 32gbRam AMD FirePro D500 3072 MB graphics
Dwight
Newcomer
????
what can this tell us about soft shadows?
Dwight Atkinson
Ben Odonnell
Contributor
Dwight wrote:

Can anybody see a difference?
No.
Ok one can play with the images in Photoshop to see the very subtle differences, but to the naked eye you can't see any difference.

Cheers.
Ben
Ben O'Donnell
Architect and CTO at BIMobject®
Get your BIM objects from bimobject.com
Anonymous
Not applicable
Hi
Wherewith longer research lightworks all the more be convinced do you Graphisoft hasn't everything aplikovano proper.
Effect Foglight I am experimented 4 o'clock than I am it opening nevertheless me no-goes item LWA_LIpoint_intensityunits
Sun that'll similar.
lightfog01.jpg
fuzzytnth3
Booster
Dwight wrote:
????
what can this tell us about soft shadows?


What I think it shows is that the difference between the two images isn't in the shadows but elsewhere in the image.

If there was absolutely no difference between the two images you would see just a black image when overlaid as I have done. As it is you are seeing some parts of the image and therefore Graphisoft are correct there is a difference albeit not in the shadows and it's blooming hard to spot
AC versions 3.41 to 25 (UKI Full 5005).
Using AC25 5005 UKI FULL
Mac OSX 10.15.7 (19G2021) Mac Pro-2013 32gbRam AMD FirePro D500 3072 MB graphics