Thanks Satira, that just got copied and pasted into OneNote.
That's a good point. I'll have to remember that when I really start playing with lighting in Poser.
Thanks, Satira. That post had a lot of very useful information in it!
The Infinite and Diffuse IBLs are "sun" lights, so you don't move them in the sense that you can move a Spotlight or Point light. xTran, yTran, and zTran does affect their positioning, but it's more like the light is scaled.
Yes, I use infinite (and I had assumed IBL would be the same) more like the sunlight source. When I'm moving this one, it's mainly the rotate dials that I play with, to simulate what direction I want the "sunlight/moonlight" to be coming from.
Click the little pin that's stuck into the center ball to select the light. Wait for it to be identified in the properties window (so you don't accidentally move the wrong light), then you can drag it all around the center ball.
This is precisely what drives me bonkers with Poser lighting. I've used those light controls (and the parameter dials) since Poser 4, and to this day, they just don't help me. It's guesswork. Move the pin, do a render... move the pins, do a render, move the pins, do a render..... I spend more time fighting with the lights in Poser than I do anything else with a scene, and eventually it was enough that I got fed up with it and just stayed inside of Studio for my artwork.
Each light has a Light Camera associated with it. It can be complicated figuring out which cameras go with which lights though ... unless you note the name of the camera when you add the light. I'm sure there is a very good reason for how the light cameras are named, but I haven't figured why some are Shadow Cam Lite and others are Shadow Lite Cam. If you use the Hierarchy Editor window and check Show cameras and Show lights, the cameras are shown parented to their light.
Question : Can the cameras be un-parented from their lights, and then have the lights parented TO the CAMERA, instead of the cameras being parented to the lights? I will have to try that the next time I'm inside Poser. If the lights are parented to the camera instead, then moving the camera
ought to make the lights follow, so you could then "point" your light in the direction you want by moving the camera...
It's just a random thought. But I personally find that looking through the lights is what helps me the most when setting up a light rig. If I aim the lights in DS while looking through that light, then I have a pretty good idea of how the lighting will come out when I do my test render. With Poser, up to this point, every single time I light a scene, it's just a lot of poke and prod and hope like crazy that the lighting actually works... and that just got old for me after a while. LOL
You are soo much better than me at talking through the WIP process. If I'm not careful (and apparently, I rarely am),
I think this comes from having an Autistic husband and daughter
(they both have Asperger's Syndrome). Especially with my daughter, I have found myself over the years in a position of having to explain literally
everything one piece at a time for her. Most Autistic individuals are extremely literal-minded, so if I miss even one small detail while I'm explaining, you can bet my daughter will ask me "What about this?"
It's just sort of translated into my WIP threads. After a while, it becomes automatic and you don't even realize you're doing it, until you're talking to non-ASD folks who then give you weird looks for going over minute little details that they, inherently, understand from context. The other reason I do so much of this in my WIP threads, is, like Lorraine mentioned earlier, sometimes the folks reading them are able to learn from someone else's process, and I have an innate tendency to always want to help people learn where possible.
So, I've never expended much effort in trying to squash the habit of going over every step when I am writing my updates for the WIP threads on things. Back when I made Tlaloc for M4, the WIP thread on the Daz Freepozitory was much the same as Nataani's here... it's just habit at this point for me. My girl is 17 years old now, and I've been married for 18 years to her Autistic father, and this sort of step-by-step communication has been an integral, necessary part of my conversation for as long as I've known my husband... and it became even more necessary for our daughter as well. At this point, it's just second nature for me.