Activity › Forums › Maxon Cinema 4D › Non-visible lights do nothing
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Non-visible lights do nothing
Posted by Paul Moore on May 5, 2014 at 6:11 pmSo I’m trying to light an object, but the lights don’t affect it at all unless I set their visibility to anything other than “none”, but when I do that, it totally washes out the scene with visible light. How do I get the lighting I want on my object without the washout from the light source?
(The object is text extruded using NURBS. I’d use MoText, but R14 Lite doesn’t seem to have that feature.)
Paul Moore replied 12 years ago 4 Members · 10 Replies -
10 Replies
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Brian Jones
May 5, 2014 at 6:34 pmcan you post the file. Lights will light an object always usually but there are many reasons why it might not affect an object – materials that just don’t show lighting (100% Luminance for example), light settings – falloff or exclusion that excludes an object. It’s hard to know without more info.
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Paul Moore
May 5, 2014 at 7:38 pmOkay, sorry it took so long. I’ve never used the file upload system here before and got a bit turned around.
File: f1.creativecow.net/7446/3d-title-project
Assume very little about my knowledge of C4D. I only started using it a few days ago.
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Brian Jones
May 5, 2014 at 9:19 pmthat’s a lot of lights. I assume most of them are for the background glow behind the text and it’s Light 10 and Light 16 you are talking about to light the text? And it’s the front face of the text you want to light (since the sides are definitely lit)?
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Paul Moore
May 5, 2014 at 10:37 pmNo, it’s the sides. Whenever I turn visibility off for 10 and 16, C4D turns them off entirely. If you disable everything but 10 and 16 and set their visibility to none, you’ll see that aren’t, in fact, lighting anything, but when I set their visibility to anything else, it washes out the image with visible light. I want to see the affects of the lights on the object without seeing the light itself.
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Tim Shetz
May 5, 2014 at 11:03 pmIt seems to have to do with your textures. When I remove them, the light shines on them correctly.
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Tim Shetz
c4dtraining.com -
Tim Shetz
May 5, 2014 at 11:09 pmMore specifically, it has to do with Mat1.
I removed both and it worked.
I removed Mat and left Mat1 and it didn’t work.
I removed Mat1 and left Mat and it worked.Something about that texture. Also, not sure why you have 2 textures. Both are set to UVW and both sides.
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Tim Shetz
c4dtraining.com -
Tim Shetz
May 6, 2014 at 12:00 amMore specifically, it has to do with Mat1.
I removed both and it worked.
I removed Mat and left Mat1 and it didn’t work.
I removed Mat1 and left Mat and it worked.Something about that texture. Also, not sure why you have 2 textures. Both are set to UVW
EDIT: if you turn the color channel on for Mat1 it works as well.
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Tim Shetz
c4dtraining.com -
Paul Moore
May 6, 2014 at 1:43 amWeird, that looks like it fixed it. Thanks.
I was doing two textures under the direction of a tutorial, but I think I’ll stick with one texture per object until I learn more about materials.
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Darby Edelen
May 7, 2014 at 3:40 pmIf the tutorial was directing you to use two textures and one of them had no color channel then I’d wager that they intended you to enable the Mix Textures check box on the top material (the material tag farther to the right).
Darby Edelen
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