Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!uunet!mcsun!hp4nl!kunivv1!root From: root@kunivv1.sci.kun.nl (Privileged Account) Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga Subject: Sculpt trouble?!? Keywords: Sculpt trouble Message-ID: <1243@kunivv1.sci.kun.nl> Date: 29 Mar 90 08:46:07 GMT Distribution: comp Organization: University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Lines: 41 After shouting out loud for several months 'Sculpt rules the waves', 'Forget about Turbo (harhar) Silver' and stuff like that, I almost died on the spot yesterday. It started with a call of one of my friends who got a problem with Sculpt. He said that you couldn't make a spotlight or something alike. After having a good laugh, I told him to find out what it was. Ofcourse, this couldn't be true!!! Now what is exactly the problem? Well, picture this... Make a face ( ;-) ) with Sculpt and place a lamp above it. What do you see (when you render it and look in the good direction)?? Exactly: what you're supposed to see... a lighted face. Now add a cylinder to this scene. Open it's bottom by removing the middle point at one end. Turn the cylinder until it faces the face with the open end and move until the lamp is on the inside. Now, you have a kind of spotlight, directed to the face. In fact, it should shed light on the face. Render the scene. What do you see? Nothing. No light whatsoever on the face. Okay, the cylinder may be lighted from the inside, but the face is totally dark. The only thing that helps here is to move the cylinder further away from the lamp. But that wasn't the idea!! I wanted light from within an object (which seems very normal to me (lamps, candles etc.)). I don't know what to think of this. At one hand, Sculpt handles VERY easy and is reasonably quick. But on the other hand is a lamp within or close to an object a very normal thing to encounter. Anyway, I don't like the idea of light-sucking objects, since it leaves you with only one alternative: putting lamps far away from objects. Does anyone know how to overcome this problem? If not, thanks anyway. Patrick Atoon, University of Nijmegen Email: a4B6@erato.cs.kun.nl // // P.S.: It's never too late to start your own crackpot religion! \X/ Guru ----