Jershaun Posted February 6, 2008 Share Posted February 6, 2008 Hi How can I make an object in VW/RW invisible to the camera BUT still show the shadows cast on it? Thanks, Quote Link to comment
CipesDesign Posted February 6, 2008 Share Posted February 6, 2008 Hi Shaun, this sounds like a Zen riddle... Could you be a bit more specific as to what you're trying to accomplish?? Quote Link to comment
russh Posted February 6, 2008 Share Posted February 6, 2008 Shaun, do you mean you want an invisible object that still casts shadows, as you can in 3D studio? I don't understand how you can cast shadows on to an invisible object. Quote Link to comment
Jershaun Posted February 7, 2008 Author Share Posted February 7, 2008 (edited) Hi Guys What I want to do is place my 3D object (eg. signage pylon) against an existing photograph. I can just do this and leave it at that BUT to integrate the 3D object into the photograph it still needs to cast shadows on the "ground and walls of the photo". Thats the end result I would like to get. This could also apply to a building superimposed on a photo. In C4D, I would do this: http://www.cineversity.com/tutorials/lesson.asp?tid=655 Thanks, Edited February 7, 2008 by Shaun Quote Link to comment
CipesDesign Posted February 7, 2008 Share Posted February 7, 2008 Easiest way I can think of would be to use the polygon tool to trace over the shadow(s) then delete (or make invisible via class?) the shadow producer. Of course this will only work for a static view... It will also require some trial & error with color(s) on the poly(s) for a realistic look... Quote Link to comment
Benson Shaw Posted February 10, 2008 Share Posted February 10, 2008 You could try mapping a texture of the photo onto a 3d rectangle. Now the image is a 3d object which can receive shadows from other 3d objects. I don't understand why the shadow casting object needs to be invisible. Seems like the bigger problem is making the shadows bend where photo shows surfaces on different planes, foreshortening, etc. Shaun, post an example image and tell what is not working. -B Quote Link to comment
Jershaun Posted February 11, 2008 Author Share Posted February 11, 2008 Hi Benson You're kind of right. In Cinema4D I would do exactly what you suggested, however C4D has a mapping type called "frontal" which will work because it wouldn't distort the background image in perspective. RW doesn't have a mapping type "frontal" so it would be extremely difficult to keep the background image flat yet still have a 3D polygon catching shadows. I'll see it I can create an image later. Thanks, Quote Link to comment
Jershaun Posted March 27, 2008 Author Share Posted March 27, 2008 Hi If you look at the first attached image (888) (created in TC10-which is 4 years old), 2 cones, 2 spheres and 4 columns are casting shadows on a base which one can't see because it has a texture applied to it. The second image (889), one can see the make-up of the material. VW, TC and ArchiCAD all use the Lightworks rendering engine and if one looks at image 3 (890), one can see ArchiCAD also has the "shadow catcher" reflectance. VW, which has a more recent version of lightworks than TC, still doesn't have this feature. Why not? Thanks for looking. Quote Link to comment
russh Posted March 27, 2008 Share Posted March 27, 2008 There's a lot of stuff in Lightworks that isn't in Renderworks. For no apparent reason. I see what you mean now by shadow catcher. Excellent idea. Quote Link to comment
Benson Shaw Posted March 28, 2008 Share Posted March 28, 2008 Hi, again, Shaun. That's what I thought you were trying to do. Your example does not show the shadows mapping up and over a curb or from ground to wall. Can the TC tool manage that? I think you could get pretty close to this with VW by mapping the background image to a 3d plane. But it would likely be a painful, trial and error process getting everything oriented. It looks like TC's shadow catcher tool takes care of light angle and orienting the 3d objects to look like they are ground related. I still do not understand the need for an invisible object which will cast shadows. Is there such an invisible object in your example? Do the 3d cones have a 2d contour which is sheared or manipulated to create the shadows? Anyway, thanks for coming back with this. -B Quote Link to comment
Jershaun Posted March 31, 2008 Author Share Posted March 31, 2008 Hi Benson As I said before the objects are lying on an extrude which the shadows are being cast on. This extrude has a texture applied to it which shows the shadows only but let's the background shows through. This creates the impression that the objects lies on ground/road. Shadows can also be cast over walls or curbs in TC. All you have to do is put a vertical plane/extrude with the same texture applied to it. Thanks, Quote Link to comment
knickers Posted March 21, 2009 Share Posted March 21, 2009 Hey Shaun, I know it's an old topic now, but did you ever find a way to achieve a Shadow Catcher in RenderWorks? Nick Quote Link to comment
Jershaun Posted March 23, 2009 Author Share Posted March 23, 2009 No. Also I asked for this prior 2009 and from what I saw in the demo, 2009 doesn't have it either. I know Lightworks has the ability but for some reason Nemetschek hasn't included it in. TurboCAD (which uses lightworks too) had this feature since years ago. Quote Link to comment
gScott Posted March 23, 2009 Share Posted March 23, 2009 benson, in shaun's example image the grey road belongs to the background image, there is no modelled "floor" visible. the shadows that are visible are being cast onto the "shadow catcher", an invisible floor in this case, and only the shadows become visible. this allows for the model to cast shadows onto a background without having to fake them in in photoshop afterwards, or to fake out a floor that they were being cast onto... Quote Link to comment
cad@sggsa Posted March 24, 2009 Share Posted March 24, 2009 So why can't we do it in VW??... Or rather Why have they not included it into VW??? If only there would be ONE program that could do it ALL This sounds like our politics over here...1 major party and 10 other smaller ones competing againt one another to win the election.....they should just all stand together.... Quote Link to comment
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