danf Posted October 11, 2008 Share Posted October 11, 2008 My question is totally covered in the subject title. I want a sunset/sunrise shot. What will this take? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin Rodney Posted October 11, 2008 Admin Share Posted October 11, 2008 I want a sunset/sunrise shot. What will this take? About 18 hours, good weather and a decent video camera. I've seen several methods to make sunrises and sunsets. For the simplest means you could animate the color of the Camera's background over time. For a more realistic look you might use several images fading in/to create the effect. You could use several patch images/layers to get this effect as well. Consider that in any scene the sun will rise in the East and set in the West so the movement of shadows should also be considered. My question is totally covered in the subject title. Not quite. There are a lot of variables here. Is this an indoor scene? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Luuk Steitner Posted October 11, 2008 Share Posted October 11, 2008 I use Vue for my skies most of the time. I create the sky I want in Vue and render it as a 360° panorama image. I apply this image to a sphere in A:M and use it as a sky dome. You can render the sky as an image sequence in Vue so you can have your sky dome animated. I have the 'Infinite' version, but you could use the 'Easel' version, which is very cheap and can be used for this purpose. But if you don't need that kind of realism, you could of course model yourself a sun and clouds (or use images) and animate those. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
danf Posted October 12, 2008 Author Share Posted October 12, 2008 It's an outdoor scene, and the sun doesn't need to be seen. I did imagine I'd rely largely on shadows to imply the sun's location, and then use the sky's color to imply the rest. But some good points got raised here if I do choose to show the sun, and that is whatever I want to show as the sun, I get to choose very specifically for myself. Whether it's stock footage, a lens flare, or a cartoon I drew in illustrator, the aesthetic is completely in the animator's control, and that's a nice reminder. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnl3d Posted October 12, 2008 Share Posted October 12, 2008 don't forget you can chnage the background "sky" over time light.mov very quick example Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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