I love the lighting in these maps
They are very eye-catching.
I love the lighting in these maps
They are very eye-catching.
Free parchments | Free seamless textures | Battle tiles / floor patterns | Room 1024 - textures for CC3 | GUILD CITY INDEX
No one is ever a failure until they give up trying
Thank you very much Bogie!
Thank you QED42.
Thank you, and looking at the Temple map again I have to agree with your assessment. Something to look out for in future maps.
Thank you very much Ilanthar.
Thank you very much Mouse. These battle maps were sort of a learning experience for me in terms of lighting. I learned a lot and think that there is still quite a bit of room for improvement with the lighting (for instance I completely neglected to add occlusion shadows).
Thanks everyone for the kind words.
Cheers,
-Arsheesh
Well, I don't know how everyone else does occlusion shadows, but I generally use a darkish shadow just inside the walls all the way around where the light is never as bright right in the corner. It seems to make the walls pop a lot more - but others may do it differently
That is not to say that anything looks 'wrong' here - it doesn't
Free parchments | Free seamless textures | Battle tiles / floor patterns | Room 1024 - textures for CC3 | GUILD CITY INDEX
No one is ever a failure until they give up trying
Yes I think that is a fairly common technique and one that works relatively well for interiors with diffused lighting. However if one is attempting to render lighting from a direct source, as was the case in the above maps, things get a bit more complicated. One has to take into consideration not only the cast shadows, but the effects of bounced light and how that light will interact with the rest of the environment. Here occlusion shadows would occur in places with no illumination from either direct or bounced light. So you would have areas that might be in shadow (i.e. cast shdow) that still received a bit of bounced light and other areas of complete darkness. Another complicating feature is that the bounced light would tend to pick up hints of color from the objects that reflected it, so areas with cast shadows might have a different tint than other areas. Of course one doesn't necessarily need to include these lighting features into a tactical map in order to create a nice looking piece, but to the extent that one does the map will look more dynamic and natural.