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July 25, 2018 at 12:57 pm #196048
Cassondra WiebeParticipantHi There,
What type of exposure settings are used on 360 panoramas? I have noticed if you have certain ceiling lights/etc. that wash out the design in 360 panoramas or high res perspectives. I wondered if I knew the exposure if I could play with the exposure setting on my perspective prior to running the 360 so that I can make sure my lighting will render nicely. Thanks!
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July 31, 2018 at 5:12 pm #196433
Neil WilsonParticipantHi Cassondra,
I’m pretty sure the 360 ignores the exposure settings from the rendering. I have found that if I want see what the 360 looks like without generating the whole thing hitting the High Quality rendering button gives me a pretty good idea without having to go through all the rendering done by the 360 pano.
Neil
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August 23, 2018 at 10:08 am #201192
Ariana ThompsonParticipantI’m also having a problem with “blown out” 360 renders. In High Quality, it looks terrific – pleasantly lit but still cozy. In the Panorama, the image is CRAZY blown out…like I cranked the brightness to 11! All except the little wedge of the room that was directly behind the camera. That looks fine. This is really frustrating! It’s so bright white I can hardly see anything!
Any info would be great – we are still practicing with v11 and want to get ourselves sorted out with it before we start to create actual kitchen!
Many thanks!
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December 19, 2018 at 6:22 pm #221330
Ariana ThompsonParticipantIf anyone ever visits this thread because they are having the “overexposure problem”, I figured it out!
Turn off the SUN.
Even with just one small window, if I had the Sun turned on, shining through the slats of the blinds – even just a little bit – TOTALLY white/yellow blowout!
As soon as I turned the Sun off – no more issue.
Ariana
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