11-12-2013, 12:21 AM
Cheers guys.
So talking with Beeston a ton about lighting theory i had a few epiphanies about local colour and specular and all that jazz.
A full chroma colour will only get as bright as the local colour unless it is overexposed. The less chroma an object has the more it will reflect the ambient colour, wheras a full chroma colour will barley tint hue at all. But in opposite light the opposite colour will actually dim.
So if you have a blue light on a red object, the red object will be fairly dark...
I'm rambling.
So talking with Beeston a ton about lighting theory i had a few epiphanies about local colour and specular and all that jazz.
A full chroma colour will only get as bright as the local colour unless it is overexposed. The less chroma an object has the more it will reflect the ambient colour, wheras a full chroma colour will barley tint hue at all. But in opposite light the opposite colour will actually dim.
So if you have a blue light on a red object, the red object will be fairly dark...
I'm rambling.
Drawing out of perspective is like singing out of tune. I'll throw a shoe at you if you do it.
Sketch Book
Sketch Book