For the final episode of the series I'll be showing 3-5 user artworks and demonstrating how to improve the lighting. Send me your artwork here: forms.gle/tZ5uJqFYZxJw2xCY7
I swear to God ... the more I experience of this guy, the more impressed I am. Starting with the excellent "Doughnut Tutorial", on to the interviews, the special topics, his presentations and everything else. I am a retired physicist and I get so tired of people confidently explaining things they clearly don't understand and getting them totally wrong. I'm not complaining that they don't know something, it's that they presume to teach other people things they clearly don't understand themselves. It's immoral. This guy never does that. He even got the basic explanation of blackbody radiation right in this tutorial. I believe he said he doesn't have a technical education somewhere (why should he, he's an artist) but he makes sure he actually understands technical material before he teaches it. That is actually very, very rare. In keeping with that, this course on lighting has more actual useful substance than anything I've ever seen on the subject. Such a find. Impressive.
As an engineer, I can agree this is one of the most annoying things to me - when people speak extremely confidently about something there appear to be a lot of knowledge gaps in. It's refreshing and fascinating seeing just how much about lighting Blender Guru understands! From a physics and computer science perspective alone, this lighting course has been very interesting (let alone the artistic applications).
I’ve learned more about art and Blender from your videos than any other source of information on the subject. You’re a fantastic teacher, please never stop.
In movies, it is simpler to convey a feeling because they can have music and sound together with image and color and that will set the mood much better compared to just image and color. Love your tutorials.
I was a semi-professional photographer for many years in the distant past. The "artificial" vs. "natural" argument has been around for a long time. But you can show examples of lighting in nature which really heads toward the artificial scale. Picture a subject surrounded by green grass or purple flowers in bright sunlight. It really tips the scale. Good work on lighting though.
John Crunk I was talking strictly about the colour of the light. You can find purple, green and blue in nature obviously, but *light* in nature is strictly kelvin.
The reason i have subscribed is because you're not tired of giving us a "FREE" courses which is really a big help for an aspiring blender newbies like me. God bless you more Andrew.
Could be that someone disagrees with something in the video but is to lazy to type his reason. I mean every video has some dislikes, but look at the ratio it is fine.
Somebody on mobile who misclicked. I'll never understand why buttons for opposites have to be next to each other that my sausage fingers may hit either one
Hey Andy. Just thought I'd offer a couple of small corrections with regard to your presentation of the Kelvin scale. The first one is that whilst it is true that most people do tend to think _"cold"_ when they see blue colours (especially light blue), on the Kelvin scale, blue is actually the highest energy (read hottest) emission from a Blackbody object-in the visible part of the spectrum, anyway. The second one was that I was trying to figure out what you meant by your comment saying _"these colours are not found anywhere in the natural world"_ . With purple this is often true, especially when it comes to actual purple-coloured light sources, but purple objects are not not non-existent, they're just *very* rare. A purple light source would require some extremely contrived situation that has no real relevance, though. Green light is actually a bit of a weird one, though. It's fairly strongly related to what you said about saturation at the end of the video and also why using blackbody light sources is fine for quite a few situations, but might also throw out some really weird results depending on how you use them and the results you're expecting to get. It's one of those things that could be explained over the course of a very short conversation, but to go throught it in any detail in text, would would start looking like an essay. A really simple way to explain it would be to say that the green of a blackbody spectrum _looks_ white because itis also red and blue at roughly similar levels (depending on the temperature). The temperature of a blackbody curve where green is the dominant wavelength of light is special (to humans) because it's the place where the wavelengths of light that we can detect with our eyes are all emitted in roughly equal quanities: think of the RGB colour selector with the red, green and blue values being roughly equal. It's the difference between an object being struck by light from a source at ~8,000 K an the source itself that matter. Like on a bright, sunny day, in a grassy field, any object that's capable of reflecting green light (paper or your hand) might appear very green when held witin a reasonably short distance of the grass because our sun is actually classed as a green star (because of it's temerature at the point where light can escape from it). I guess it's a colour that you could think of as being like a ninja who only leaps out when the time is right to strike. Man... that was significantly more wordage that I expected to write for for a couple of simple suggestions. Oh well. I like your videos anyway. You're obviously trying your best and I didn't want you to think this is just some _"SHUT UP IDIOT!!!!!11!!11!"_ style rant.
Warm/Cold Lighting: 1) Connotations of colors is highlight dependent on viewer upbringing 2) Create cold scene with warm on focal point. 2a) Buildings shot in "Blue Hour" to highlight the warm of home & light intensity inside house matches with environment 3) Use "Blockbody" to get Kelvin colour scheme. 4) Humans associate things that happen in same time and place as related. So in movies, you can make the viewer associate colours with certain feelings. 5) Use white light to show true color of model 6) Adding both cold and warm lights will AMPLIFY BOTH because you have anchor to relate/base off from 7) Using colors outside the Kevin colors will show they are in man-made environment
Totally unrelated but colors can correspond to feeling a certain way if paired with the proper sound frequency. It's a bit fringe but there are studies in cymatics that can correlate a certain spectrum to feeling and re-use that spectrum in color. Example; relatively low frequency sound (400hz) coupled with red lights illicit a sense of anxiety.
just I wanna say: been learning blender for a while and when it comes to lighting the scene : I had no idea how I should put the colors of the lights... I did try the complementary colors but still felt like I wanna know when, how and why to use each colors to make my 3D look better in final renders this course is so valuable!! thank you so much! learning a lot!!
Something I want to add. You have to change to Cycles as your render engine in order to use nodes for the light source. And once this is changed, the Nodes menu appears in the Object Data properties of the light object just like in the video. Then you can click the dot next to Color(though in version 3.0 the dot is on the left of the color selection bar thing and not the right) and select Blackbody like in the video, which automatically adds the node in the Shading view.
Hey Andrew, great as always. Funny enough, when i first saw the thumbnail, i thought the second image would be some sort of normal map xD Greetings from Germany
Even doing as little as changing a white light to a very slight dulled white yellowish tint instantly changes the sensation of lighting to feel more organic in indoor renders. If you look at a light bulb in the real world, pure white light is not coming out of it, a sort of yellowish light is and it effects everything about the warmth of a room. True sterile white light is rare.
One of the best examples of the use of color in movies that immediately came to mind for me was the Matrix. In the original matrix especially, whenever they're in it, there's a green tinge. In the real world, colors look more natural - more on that Kelvin scale. Another really cool example of lighting in film was the kung-fu movie Hero. Different versions of the main story are shown with different colors based on who is telling them. It is left to the viewer to try and figure out which of these stories is true before finally approaching the final story and color ;)
Interestingly or ironically enough...stop signs across the world are pretty much universally red. But at least in the United States, they used to be yellow. The first STOP sign appeared in 1915 in Detroit, Michigan. Yellow was a color visible easily during day and night (a red sign looked too dark at night). This was before reflective beads were available to make a red sign reflective. (www.trafficsign.us/yellowstop.html) So while culturally, colors do and can evoke different emotions or feelings...there are at least some colors that are universally practical for certain purposes. Food for thought.
hey just wanna Say THANKYOU THANKYOU For your tutorials. I'm currently on blender beginner series " part 5" learned to make a mug and crash it, oh man it was just awesome you have explained in such a way that even a dumb person like me could easily follow. Thankyou GURU!!!!
someone who's following this now but couldn't find the same in 9.2 version and using CYLCES, this is for PURE BEGINNERS like me select Light layer in OUTLINER----->sel Object data properties of the same in PROPERTIES editor------> sel SPOT------> NODES------>USE NODES------->go to SHADING WORKSPACE------->ADD EMISSION----->add LIGHT OUTPUT---->shift+A >converter>BLACKBODY.PLUG IN COLOR O/P OF BLACKBODY TO COLOR INPUT OF EMISSION AND TO SURFACE IN LIGHT O/P. CHANGING THE VALUES OF TEMPARATURE FROM LOW TO HIGH GIVES YOU SHADES OF RED TO BLUE JUST AS THE KELVIN SCALE.
This series is really good! Not because I learned so much new bund because so much of it is really on point. I am more from the (self-taught) photography side of things and knew nearly all of it, but now In know it in a better way ;-)
I mean yeah, as you said it's bullshit that each color is biologically understood a certain, but it isn't random - it's just cultural, as you also touched upon with your example about red. Color in movies is a cinematic shorthand not unlike, for example, camera movement and framing - these's not much inherently ominous about a dolly in or inherently intense about a closeup, but we have been conditioned to feel those emotions when we see those tools being applied. A medium shot of a character sitting in a room with blue-ish window light coming in, and the same character in the same room lit with a crimson red lamp in an extreme closeup will definitely communicate two very different things even if they never change expression. Everything that makes up a shot goes a little bit towards either communicating something cohesive or not.
Awesome as always. A small point of order - you mentioned a few times that city lights are a greenish-blue color. This might be a difference between Australia vs. USA, but over here most street lights are high-pressure sodium lights, which are a really nasty orange color. It really sucks to photograph, it wipes out all natural color. I think the greenish type you mention, can be seen in parking garages (on the right of this pic). i.imgur.com/Snj8ckN.jpg
CreeDorofl yeah I should have specified that it’s only *some* street lights. Australia we mostly see the orange-yellow lights too. But nowadays newer streets use white LEDs.
I suppose that the statement of The Golden Hour and The Blue Hour have minor mistakes: The Golden Hour is the hour after the sunrise or the hour before the sunset. The Blue Hour is the hour before the sunrise or the hour after the sunset.
One question. This type of modelling, in 3D, the setting of maybe a videogame or a scene, the lighting... Is there any career or course specially focused into that? How are they called? If Iam to do computer science (i know it has nothing to do with this), is there any master availible or something? I know you dont live not even in my country but in general terms. Thanks a lot
Color has role in life. Depressed people try to hide themselves in dark. Depression supports darkness & chaos. Happy people rejoice in the lightful atmosphere. My own point of view: When we deficient of something in our body(nutrition etc.) or mind, to balance that deficiency we instinctively get attracted to certain color (fruits/vegetables/atmosphere etc.). This applies not only to color but for taste or etc. also. eg. Certain patients eats ice that taste like iron naturally even though ice may not have iron nutrition. Unknowingly to balance the iron deficiency their taste instinct is directing them. Similarly we may have color instinct also.,To choose certain fruits/vegetable to be healthy always.
Hey Andrew, huge fan! Quick question for you: In 2.79 you are able to see the subsurf wireframe of a mesh even when you hide vertices, but in 2.8 if you hide vertices the subsurf wireframe of the hidden vertices is hidden as well. Any remedy for this? Or do you anticipate it being included in the official release? Thanks!
I hope my comment is noticed. It would be great if u make a tutorial like a series about lighting a pre-made interior or exterior scene with - sunrise, morning,noon, sunset, golden hour, evening, night, to show which sun lamp colors, sun softness and which sky colors to use or maybe with nishita sky. I wonder about sky color+sun softness+sun color, depending on time of day or weather. For example if someone does a timelapse of 24 hours? It would be greatttttt if u do itt. Most people do lighting without analyzing, so it would be great
One thing that I realize in this video is, the warm color in sunset on the rock beach (#5:08) make me feel sad. Because of when is saw this scene, I need to get in my house and do some chore/job after lay down on the afternoon, read the (study) books and get tranquil and peaceful. And... I feel lost too. That's funny!
at 6:50, did you mean an hour before sunrise and 1 hour after sunset? great tutorials man! I have started of my 3d animation journey, and am here after the donut!
14:10 noob question here: how can i show the camera in blender in a tile? like here on the left. and i mean only the camera not the preview window where i can see the frame in the middle with stuff around it. camera pov essentially. thanks
For the final episode of the series I'll be showing 3-5 user artworks and demonstrating how to improve the lighting.
Send me your artwork here: forms.gle/tZ5uJqFYZxJw2xCY7
Andrew, fix your video title pls.
Your title is wrong. It says "Lighting Mastery - Part 3/5: Size" -> Should say "Lighting Mastery - Part 3/5: Color"
@Matheus Do Canto 2.8 beta
I learned warm and cool... And trying putting one orange, one pink light everywhere... And it became just really sad because I would hate it
I swear to God ... the more I experience of this guy, the more impressed I am. Starting with the excellent "Doughnut Tutorial", on to the interviews, the special topics, his presentations and everything else. I am a retired physicist and I get so tired of people confidently explaining things they clearly don't understand and getting them totally wrong. I'm not complaining that they don't know something, it's that they presume to teach other people things they clearly don't understand themselves. It's immoral. This guy never does that. He even got the basic explanation of blackbody radiation right in this tutorial. I believe he said he doesn't have a technical education somewhere (why should he, he's an artist) but he makes sure he actually understands technical material before he teaches it. That is actually very, very rare. In keeping with that, this course on lighting has more actual useful substance than anything I've ever seen on the subject. Such a find. Impressive.
As an engineer, I can agree this is one of the most annoying things to me - when people speak extremely confidently about something there appear to be a lot of knowledge gaps in.
It's refreshing and fascinating seeing just how much about lighting Blender Guru understands! From a physics and computer science perspective alone, this lighting course has been very interesting (let alone the artistic applications).
One quick note: "golden" is an hour after sunrise and before sunset and "blue" is an hour before sunrise and after sunset :)
I’ve learned more about art and Blender from your videos than any other source of information on the subject. You’re a fantastic teacher, please never stop.
In movies, it is simpler to convey a feeling because they can have music and sound together with image and color and that will set the mood much better compared to just image and color.
Love your tutorials.
very true
I was a semi-professional photographer for many years in the distant past. The "artificial" vs. "natural" argument has been around for a long time. But you can show examples of lighting in nature which really heads toward the artificial scale. Picture a subject surrounded by green grass or purple flowers in bright sunlight. It really tips the scale. Good work on lighting though.
John Crunk I was talking strictly about the colour of the light. You can find purple, green and blue in nature obviously, but *light* in nature is strictly kelvin.
Legend says that Andrew still hasn’t answered his wife’s phone call
Haha
Yeah. it's been like years
I'm a lighting artist in the industry and I find this video actually really helpful!
I'm a simple person, I see Blender Guru's tutorial, I hit like.
Then u are not simple anymore I guess
Huge respect for you sir ....
The reason i have subscribed is because you're not tired of giving us a "FREE" courses which is really a big help for an aspiring blender newbies like me. God bless you more Andrew.
Who clicks dislikes?
Haters? Reptiloids? Grayscale earth society?
Could be that someone disagrees with something in the video but is to lazy to type his reason. I mean every video has some dislikes, but look at the ratio it is fine.
Ilya Kanatov I was just saying the same thing! This video series is simply amazing 🙌🏾
color-blind ?
Somebody on mobile who misclicked. I'll never understand why buttons for opposites have to be next to each other that my sausage fingers may hit either one
Autodesk employees.
Hey Andy. Just thought I'd offer a couple of small corrections with regard to your presentation of the Kelvin scale. The first one is that whilst it is true that most people do tend to think _"cold"_ when they see blue colours (especially light blue), on the Kelvin scale, blue is actually the highest energy (read hottest) emission from a Blackbody object-in the visible part of the spectrum, anyway. The second one was that I was trying to figure out what you meant by your comment saying _"these colours are not found anywhere in the natural world"_ . With purple this is often true, especially when it comes to actual purple-coloured light sources, but purple objects are not not non-existent, they're just *very* rare. A purple light source would require some extremely contrived situation that has no real relevance, though. Green light is actually a bit of a weird one, though. It's fairly strongly related to what you said about saturation at the end of the video and also why using blackbody light sources is fine for quite a few situations, but might also throw out some really weird results depending on how you use them and the results you're expecting to get. It's one of those things that could be explained over the course of a very short conversation, but to go throught it in any detail in text, would would start looking like an essay. A really simple way to explain it would be to say that the green of a blackbody spectrum _looks_ white because itis also red and blue at roughly similar levels (depending on the temperature). The temperature of a blackbody curve where green is the dominant wavelength of light is special (to humans) because it's the place where the wavelengths of light that we can detect with our eyes are all emitted in roughly equal quanities: think of the RGB colour selector with the red, green and blue values being roughly equal. It's the difference between an object being struck by light from a source at ~8,000 K an the source itself that matter. Like on a bright, sunny day, in a grassy field, any object that's capable of reflecting green light (paper or your hand) might appear very green when held witin a reasonably short distance of the grass because our sun is actually classed as a green star (because of it's temerature at the point where light can escape from it). I guess it's a colour that you could think of as being like a ninja who only leaps out when the time is right to strike.
Man... that was significantly more wordage that I expected to write for for a couple of simple suggestions. Oh well. I like your videos anyway. You're obviously trying your best and I didn't want you to think this is just some _"SHUT UP IDIOT!!!!!11!!11!"_ style rant.
"What emotion do you think of when you see red?"
My response: Apple!
sameee!
me tomato
Warm/Cold Lighting:
1) Connotations of colors is highlight dependent on viewer upbringing
2) Create cold scene with warm on focal point.
2a) Buildings shot in "Blue Hour" to highlight the warm of home & light intensity inside house matches with environment
3) Use "Blockbody" to get Kelvin colour scheme.
4) Humans associate things that happen in same time and place as related. So in movies, you can make the viewer associate colours with certain feelings.
5) Use white light to show true color of model
6) Adding both cold and warm lights will AMPLIFY BOTH because you have anchor to relate/base off from
7) Using colors outside the Kevin colors will show they are in man-made environment
This video series is so good. You’re an amazing teacher 🙌🏾
Totally unrelated but colors can correspond to feeling a certain way if paired with the proper sound frequency. It's a bit fringe but there are studies in cymatics that can correlate a certain spectrum to feeling and re-use that spectrum in color.
Example; relatively low frequency sound (400hz) coupled with red lights illicit a sense of anxiety.
Your videos are amazing and genuinely appreciated. Your generosity should be a staple in humanity.
just I wanna say: been learning blender for a while and when it comes to lighting the scene : I had no idea how I should put the colors of the lights... I did try the complementary colors but still felt like I wanna know when, how and why to use each colors to make my 3D look better in final renders
this course is so valuable!! thank you so much! learning a lot!!
honestly, its incredible the amount of effort and hard works you had in these stunting series. thanks a milion
Kinda ironic that warmer temps on the kelvin scale look colder to the viewer and colder temps make the scene look warmer.
The David Fincher movie screenshots prove Andrew is a man of taste
Amazing tutorial as always. Cant wait for the next two in the series.. Thanks for the knowledge Blender Guru
I absolutely love your tutorials. Thanks for the great content!
I been tuning in to this series like it's GOT...
YT: A new Blender Guru video.
Me: 😊
If you want Blackbody in 2.9, it is now a node just called "Blackbody" that you can simply plug into the color of your light.
Something I want to add. You have to change to Cycles as your render engine in order to use nodes for the light source. And once this is changed, the Nodes menu appears in the Object Data properties of the light object just like in the video. Then you can click the dot next to Color(though in version 3.0 the dot is on the left of the color selection bar thing and not the right) and select Blackbody like in the video, which automatically adds the node in the Shading view.
Hey Andrew, great as always.
Funny enough, when i first saw the thumbnail, i thought the second image would be some sort of normal map xD
Greetings from Germany
3:49 the blue sky or the sunset orange isn't caused by temperature but by the quantity of atmosphere that light goes through
really interesting stuff, thanks for making this series!
even though this is about blender my photo teacher thought it had some really good ideas and decided to show it to my photo class
I'm not even kidding, this guy's one of the greatest teachers on the planet and all his content is free
Even doing as little as changing a white light to a very slight dulled white yellowish tint instantly changes the sensation of lighting to feel more organic in indoor renders.
If you look at a light bulb in the real world, pure white light is not coming out of it, a sort of yellowish light is and it effects everything about the warmth of a room.
True sterile white light is rare.
Oh gosh! Thank you Andrew! Wonderful explanation
After this video, I'll never look at the cold and warm lights surrounding me the same way as before
Oh my god, this is literally treasure course for me! Thank you so much!
One of the best examples of the use of color in movies that immediately came to mind for me was the Matrix. In the original matrix especially, whenever they're in it, there's a green tinge. In the real world, colors look more natural - more on that Kelvin scale.
Another really cool example of lighting in film was the kung-fu movie Hero. Different versions of the main story are shown with different colors based on who is telling them. It is left to the viewer to try and figure out which of these stories is true before finally approaching the final story and color ;)
Interestingly or ironically enough...stop signs across the world are pretty much universally red. But at least in the United States, they used to be yellow. The first STOP sign appeared in 1915 in Detroit, Michigan. Yellow was a color visible easily during day and night (a red sign looked too dark at night). This was before reflective beads were available to make a red sign reflective. (www.trafficsign.us/yellowstop.html)
So while culturally, colors do and can evoke different emotions or feelings...there are at least some colors that are universally practical for certain purposes.
Food for thought.
Incredibly valuable info, thanks a lot Andrew! And hi to the guy who just came into the office.
Pink got a whole new meaning after this video
Great one, loved it!
Thank you for making these!
i don't know why but i really like when you start speaking random things
Thank you for saying HDR photography looks terrible. I smiled :)
Oof
This channel is amazing
hey just wanna Say THANKYOU THANKYOU For your tutorials. I'm currently on blender beginner series " part 5" learned to make a mug and crash it, oh man it was just awesome you have explained in such a way that even a dumb person like me could easily follow.
Thankyou GURU!!!!
you need 1 million subscribers VERY UNDERRATED channel...
your videos are useful and not clickbait
Agreed
I agree
Zexestor thanks bud :)
@@blenderguru ;D
@@blenderguru Another beginner series and you will hit one million, I've already subscribed to you from all my accounts..;)
8:01 The Nodes in the Object Date Porperties of the light will be displayed only in Cycles rendering mode.
someone who's following this now but couldn't find the same in 9.2 version and using CYLCES, this is for PURE BEGINNERS like me
select Light layer in OUTLINER----->sel Object data properties of the same in PROPERTIES editor------> sel SPOT------> NODES------>USE NODES------->go to SHADING WORKSPACE------->ADD EMISSION----->add LIGHT OUTPUT---->shift+A >converter>BLACKBODY.PLUG IN COLOR O/P OF BLACKBODY TO COLOR INPUT OF EMISSION AND TO SURFACE IN LIGHT O/P. CHANGING THE VALUES OF TEMPARATURE FROM LOW TO HIGH GIVES YOU SHADES OF RED TO BLUE JUST AS THE KELVIN SCALE.
*WHITE PANTHER*
Marvel wants to know your location.
Great as always! Thanks a lot.
Blender Guru: so what do you think of when seeing this color? (shows red square)
me (for some reason): why a red square? why not blue or white?
Here in Soviet Russia red square means only the Red Square
I thought "oh, i wonder what's inside it?" Cause of the question mark on it xD
hi fascinating how u made these tutorials thank u so much... love from algeria
your bro from Algeria (bejaia) 😍
your other bro from Algeria (Ain Defla)
i guess there's juste the 3 of us who use blender in algeria hhh we should claim our place in blender community hahaha
@@SohaibBeddi dont worry there is way more than this in facebook groups blender 3d artist for example
3d artists dz*
the best teacher
Hey blender guru you should see a video called: blender - 11 awesome addons you should know
This series is really good! Not because I learned so much new bund because so much of it is really on point. I am more from the (self-taught) photography side of things and knew nearly all of it, but now In know it in a better way ;-)
There must be something spacial when u hit 1 million! Right?
Another 🍩 tutorial i demand
Jelly donuts
Do you want him to make a bonus scene where he makes it glow again?
Probably how to eat them Lol
Were you happy with what he produced for the 1 million sub special? :)
@@steves1015 yup :D..
I actually forgot what the video was about so I rewatched it :)
I mean yeah, as you said it's bullshit that each color is biologically understood a certain, but it isn't random - it's just cultural, as you also touched upon with your example about red. Color in movies is a cinematic shorthand not unlike, for example, camera movement and framing - these's not much inherently ominous about a dolly in or inherently intense about a closeup, but we have been conditioned to feel those emotions when we see those tools being applied.
A medium shot of a character sitting in a room with blue-ish window light coming in, and the same character in the same room lit with a crimson red lamp in an extreme closeup will definitely communicate two very different things even if they never change expression. Everything that makes up a shot goes a little bit towards either communicating something cohesive or not.
I had never even thought about how light color affects things. Interesting
Amazing series!!!
Legend!! Thank you so much 🔥
I see her half dressed Andriew . :P Great tut..you re really good. Really needed that right now!!!!!
This is better than lectures in uni
8:16
Oh my god.
And I was looking up interactive charts of color - temp and copying and pasting the hexadecimal name of that color XD
Blender Guru is so based
Awesome as always. A small point of order - you mentioned a few times that city lights are a greenish-blue color. This might be a difference between Australia vs. USA, but over here most street lights are high-pressure sodium lights, which are a really nasty orange color. It really sucks to photograph, it wipes out all natural color. I think the greenish type you mention, can be seen in parking garages (on the right of this pic). i.imgur.com/Snj8ckN.jpg
CreeDorofl yeah I should have specified that it’s only *some* street lights. Australia we mostly see the orange-yellow lights too. But nowadays newer streets use white LEDs.
I think a perfect example of this topic is Spiderman into the spiderverse
I suppose that the statement of The Golden Hour and The Blue Hour have minor mistakes: The Golden Hour is the hour after the sunrise or the hour before the sunset. The Blue Hour is the hour before the sunrise or the hour after the sunset.
thank you very much!!!!
Always quality content, thank you!
Thank's Andrew
One question. This type of modelling, in 3D, the setting of maybe a videogame or a scene, the lighting... Is there any career or course specially focused into that? How are they called? If Iam to do computer science (i know it has nothing to do with this), is there any master availible or something? I know you dont live not even in my country but in general terms.
Thanks a lot
All my targeted ads are for Donuts & Lighting 😂 #StrongWorkYo
12:20 why I see pink only as the donut icing then
thanks blender guru my boy
Color has role in life. Depressed people try to hide themselves in dark. Depression supports darkness & chaos. Happy people rejoice in the lightful atmosphere.
My own point of view: When we deficient of something in our body(nutrition etc.) or mind, to balance that deficiency we instinctively get attracted to certain color (fruits/vegetables/atmosphere etc.). This applies not only to color but for taste or etc. also. eg. Certain patients eats ice that taste like iron naturally even though ice may not have iron nutrition. Unknowingly to balance the iron deficiency their taste instinct is directing them. Similarly we may have color instinct also.,To choose certain fruits/vegetable to be healthy always.
Such a great resource. Thank you!
I've had a crush on that woman character since I began this lighting course, finally admitting in level 3.
Already subbed to your newsletter. Its actually the only one I keep, because it is useful and interesting! ^^
Andrew, You really like Blade Runner 2049!
Hey Andrew, huge fan! Quick question for you:
In 2.79 you are able to see the subsurf wireframe of a mesh even when you hide vertices, but in 2.8 if you hide vertices the subsurf wireframe of the hidden vertices is hidden as well. Any remedy for this? Or do you anticipate it being included in the official release? Thanks!
Andrew could you do tutorial of facebuilder plug in blender ?
Red = Mighter Morphin' Power Rangers. It is what it is...
Its my childhood
Red = "Autobots! Roll out!"
It's MY childhood. :P
for a split second I thought that middle one was some kind of normal map lol
What does that type of lighting called cause I want to recreate that but don’t know where to look
Wooooow guru indeed
the lady in the middle 18:20 , the one on the thumbnail looks like a normal map
Why does the title of the video say "Lighting Mastery - Part 3/5: Size" when this one is about color?
yeah I just noticed that as well
My mistake! Corrected it now.
I hope my comment is noticed. It would be great if u make a tutorial like a series about lighting a pre-made interior or exterior scene with - sunrise, morning,noon, sunset, golden hour, evening, night, to show which sun lamp colors, sun softness and which sky colors to use or maybe with nishita sky. I wonder about sky color+sun softness+sun color, depending on time of day or weather. For example if someone does a timelapse of 24 hours? It would be greatttttt if u do itt. Most people do lighting without analyzing, so it would be great
thanks for the video! really appreciate it
>"What emotion do u think of when u see the color red? It might be anger, urgency, warning, danger, but that is probably bc u live in the West..."
Да.
The daytime shot at 7:24 reminds me of the old computer game called "Myst"
Anyone know where I would find a proper kelvin color scale as the one shown in the video? Optimally an official one if such even exists.
One thing that I realize in this video is, the warm color in sunset on the rock beach (#5:08) make me feel sad. Because of when is saw this scene, I need to get in my house and do some chore/job after lay down on the afternoon, read the (study) books and get tranquil and peaceful.
And... I feel lost too. That's funny!
at 6:50, did you mean an hour before sunrise and 1 hour after sunset? great tutorials man! I have started of my 3d animation journey, and am here after the donut!
Strange that the higher temperatures are colder...
I got to meet the guru himself. it was very enlightening :)
Lucky, i just sat at home eating potatoe chips
@@depperrwhayyleflopflopwigg5939 Yeah he's a humble dude, well worth the catch up. Potato chips sound good too :)
Understanding colour: Am I a joke to you?
Can you do a video on all the programs you use with blender and briefly explain each one please??
1:38
- What emotion do you think of when you see the color red ?
- Apple.
14:10 noob question here: how can i show the camera in blender in a tile? like here on the left. and i mean only the camera not the preview window where i can see the frame in the middle with stuff around it. camera pov essentially. thanks
Thank you so much 💕😊😊😊😊💕💕😊💕😊💕💕💕😊😊