Almost every blender texture tutorial goes like "Now I am gonna add a fresnel node" and it keeps me wondering what the heck is he doing. Thank you for the explanation. It makes more sense to me now
Vera level ji ninga such a great explanation in minutes...love from India' 🇮🇳❤️podu thagida thagida .........on joy I used some tamil words ........this cleared my mind about 4 years of conclusion
It is a complicated one to truly wrap your head around. If you want a funny skit about it, take a look at this video as well: th-cam.com/video/U9rgG2vPAvQ/w-d-xo.html
@@invalidacess Not always, usually only at the end of a word. In this case I'm guessing that the name is constructed from two words fres and nel (although they don't have an independent meaning nowadays).
Almost every blender texture tutorial goes like "Now I am gonna add a fresnel node" and it keeps me wondering what the heck is he doing. Thank you for the explanation. It makes more sense to me now
Haha, ya it's one of those concepts that are taken for granted nowadays. Happy to help! :)
This video and some of the others you have done have been super useful. Thanks!
I'm happy you've been enjoying them. Thanks for checking them out! :)
This is a fantastic explanation. Thanks!
Happy to help! :)
That's the video I wanted! Great jov
Happy to help! :)
Amazing explanation, now i finnaly can understand this, tnx so much
Happy to help! :)
Vera level ji ninga such a great explanation in minutes...love from India' 🇮🇳❤️podu thagida thagida .........on joy I used some tamil words ........this cleared my mind about 4 years of conclusion
Happy to help, thank you for watching! :)
Finally! I never knew wth it really was >.
It is a complicated one to truly wrap your head around. If you want a funny skit about it, take a look at this video as well: th-cam.com/video/U9rgG2vPAvQ/w-d-xo.html
perfect!!!
Glad you liked it! :)
Chris Nicols would be proud. (CG Garage podcast)
Ha, somebody gets it! :D
the one thing i cant get over is that he kept saying fre-nel and just forgetting theres a "S" ....
It is named after French physicist Augustin-Jean Fresnel. His pronunciation is therefore correct.
@@diatonicdelirium1743 so the "s" is silent in French?
@@invalidacess Not always, usually only at the end of a word. In this case I'm guessing that the name is constructed from two words fres and nel (although they don't have an independent meaning nowadays).
I mean isnt this obvious? If the light is bouncing from an angle where the light is coming from, its gonna reflect more of the lightsource