A few Bryce questions

How do I make a texture into a decal? It seems the mapping modes just stretch it out over the object. is their any way to apply, say, a grate onto a normal texture?

How do I use a pict as an alpha channel?

Radiosity.... I know Bryce has it but calls it "true ambience" or something. I can't figure out how to turn it on. I know it lightens your scene, but what exactly does it do?

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Hey bud. Sorry I can't help you out, otherwise I would. Do you know what is up with the rest of the Sephil guys? I keep e-mailing them and I don't get any responses. Have a nice one!

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(This message has been edited by Psygnosis Adherent (edited 04-23-2003).)

Hey Pysg, Neon.

Neon- can't help you out. But this will at least bump your topic.
Pysg- I'm still alive- I've just been in LA, and I've been working all week. Don't worry, we're not dead. P might be- I haven't seen him in a while. Did you not get my last e-mail? (I think it was re: May include some letdowns or somesuch). I'll resend it anyway.

Now, back to answering the questions that have been posed. Come on, Brycers!

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~Charlie

Quote

Originally posted by Neon Soldier:
**
Radiosity.... I know Bryce calls it "true ambience" or something.**

No i don't, I call it 'radiosity' 😉
Seriously, the 3D program is KPT Bryce (For the very first one) or Bryce n. (Where n is the version, e.g. Bryce 3)
😄

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Where do you want to (url="http://"http://www.macclassics.com/cythera/tricks/rJade.htm")teleport(/url) today?

Radiosity (or "True Ambiance") is the where instead of light (photons) pushing through objects in the scene it causes the photons to bounce off of other objects. That way it can obtain very natural lighting, that actually behaves the way it does in the real world. And of course it will take up 3 - 10 times as long to render with Radiosity turned on.

In order to have a decal I believe you need to have an alpha channel along side the texure map. That way you define what areas you want shone and others you don't

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I'm not sure about this, but try the premium rendering settings, see if the true ambience setting is there. I know I've seen it somewhere before...

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To turn on "true ambience" you have to set your antialiasing level to "premium quality". This will allow you to turn on a number of render abilities such as "true ambience" in the render properties panel. It'll also allow you to change your rays-per-pixel setting...which you'll want to increase to keep these effects from looking too grainly. That also increases render times many times over.

First off, true ambience affects the ambient channel of your textures. It looks best with the ambient level for your textures set to about 25% or 50% of the diffuse channel. That means, though, that Bryce's normal ambience will horribly lighten your objects unless you "turn it off" by setting the ambient color in the sky properties to black. Unfortunately, that means that the old way of making glowing bits, like windows on a ship, through the ambient channel can not be used effectively with true ambience.

Then, true ambience looks for existing light in the scene, meaning if you have a light shining on an object, or a sky, or glowing volumetric objects (which can glow independently of the ambience setting), they will appear to cast light - radiosity (or "true ambience" here) simulates light bouncing off of surfaces. It also takes reflection and refraction into account on the bounced light. A bit more on that later.

Something to keep in mind; the level of "true ambience" bounces (meaning, the number of times diffused light will keep bouncing off of surfaces) is tied to the ray depth. You can find that by the shadow options in the render properties panel. Turn it down unless you want very long render times...even setting it as low as 1 works decently. Unfortunately, that pretty much precludes including anything transparent in your scene, as the ray depth (which usually controls how many surfaces a ray will pass through before dying) is so low.

Now, when I said that "true ambience" takes refraction and reflection into account, that's only for light that's already bounced off a surface. You can light a scene by creating an object with diffuse properties only, and shining a light on it, and having the rest of the scene only have ambience in their materials. If your ray depth is up a few levels, the bounced light will be refracted through any glass-like objects you have and reflected off of any reflective objects, showing true caustic effects (the bending and reflecting of light). This takes a LONG time to render, though.

I'll just point out here, again, that Bryce lights only show on the diffuse properties of a material, and "true ambience" shows on the ambient properties. That means you'll most often want your diffuse and ambient channels to use the same textures, but set the ambient channel to 25%-50% of the diffuse channel. It also means that, unless you want a horrible amount of regular ambience in your scene, you have to set the ambient color of the sky to black, effectively turning it off.

Personally, I'd like it a lot better if "true ambience" affected the diffuse channels, but...it doesn't. 😛

Quick tip: one of the basic uses for "radiosity" in CG is to show off a model by lighting it with a "sky dome". To do this quickly and easily in Bryce, make a scene with just a ground plane and your model. Set the model's textures to use the same textures for ambience as diffuse, and set them to the same levels (unlike I advised before). Edit your sky to disable the sun (and the visible sun glow), shadows, ambience, haze, fog, clouds, etc. Change your sky type to "custom" and make the sky a solid color (white works well). Enable "true ambience", set the ray depth to 1, and turn up the rays-per-pixel a bit. Render.

(Of course, if you want to get creative and include a full sky, that works too, but usually people use a solid color for these types of renders)

There you go, a basic guide to using "true ambience". You're welcome. 😄

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(This message has been edited by Weepul 884 (edited 04-25-2003).)