Killer Lighting – Lighting for Photorealistic Renders – Part 3 Controlling Studio Lights

Killer Lighting – Lighting for Photorealistic Renders – Part 3 Controlling Studio Lights


Have you ever rendered a scene in Daz Studio and wondered where the light’s coming from? How to control it? How to make it brighter, darker, moody, sultry, or action-packed? Of course you have. That’s the reason most of us are creating digital artwork!

Once we have the pose right, the scene set, and the characters in place, clothed, makeup applied, hair coiffed just so, with a sultry expression, it’s time to bring the scene to life, and you can’t do that without light and — a key ingredient in John’s technique — shadows . Light focuses our attention on the key shapes in a scene, and shadows give definition and depth . Without good lighting, your renders will be flat and unappealing.

Working exclusively with the Iray Render Engine , we use real-world lighting techniques. In terms of terminology and the types of lights we put into our scenes, we use softboxes, reflectors, color temperature, high-key, low-key, studio portraiture, bodyscaping, Rembrandt lighting, using a mirror as a backdrop, god rays, and haze. We know what the rules are and when to break them. John expertly takes you through examples of these kinds of lighting and more. John creates the renders using only Daz Studio and freely downloadable lighting resources (such as HDRI files). You won’t need to use third-party software like Photoshop.

Did you know that there are 2 separate f-stop parameters in different parts of the Daz Studio interface , one that controls depth of field and one that controls scene brightness? John clearly explains these and the other parts of Daz Studio that make lighting confusing, highlighting the key parameters that actually make a big difference to a scene.

Painting with light is an artistic skill that the movie industry has long recognized as key to creating mood and feeling. Understanding the settings and how and when to use them will help you to create more photorealistic renders without the frustration of adding light after light to a scene without knowing in advance what they will actually achieve. After getting to grips with digital lighting mechanisms and the relevant Daz controls, John describes several rules that help you avoid common lighting errors, such as boring ‘flat’ light and shadows that go in impossible directions. Crucially, John explains when to break the rules and shows how lighting techniques that look terrible in some scenes can make others pop with energy.

Note: Although this product is available by single episodes, we highly recommend purchasing the bundle because each episode builds on information from the previous and, for time considerations, is not repeated in every episode.

Bonus for Bundle purchasers: We have included the custom IES Profiles that are demonstrated in Episodes 4 and 5.

All in all, there are over 8 hours of content that will leave no question in your mind about how to light whatever scene you have in your imagination.

Each episode is professionally edited, sound balanced, and closed-captioned for ease of search and all include a PDF index of key points for ease of reference.

Part 3 – Controlling Studio Lights (1 hour 45 minutes)

Shooting in a studio, especially a virtual studio, affords the artist some incredible freedom. Backdrops can be placed so far away that no lights hit them at all. Floors can be huge in relation to the size of the studio. In the real world, we are limited by the physical size of the studio, so the photographer must rely on tricks to get the look that they’re going for.

In this episode, John builds on all that we’ve learned so far to demonstrate how Dome and Scene lighting can be used to create very different scenes and very different types of lighting: full body in motion, portraiture, high key lighting, ‘Rembrandt’ lighting (a well-known arrangement of key, rim, and fill), and using a mirror to see both the front and the back of your model at the same time. The mirror is especially interesting because it reflects not just the models but also the HDRI that we’re using, so John explains the special tricks to prevent incoming HDRI light from being reflected.



Anna

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