samfred2 commited on
Commit
9aed134
·
verified ·
1 Parent(s): ef65519

Add transcription for: frames/CreativeShrimp_CinematicLightingBlender_DownloadPirate.com_Night_Lighting_Intro_mp4_frames.zip

Browse files
transcriptions/frames/CreativeShrimp_CinematicLightingBlender_DownloadPirate.com_Night_Lighting_Intro_mp4_frames_transcription.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "text": " Hey, what's up, Gleb here! In the next 5 minutes, I'll walk you through the contents of the new and very exciting extension pack to cinematic lighting course. It'll make it easier for you to decide if that's something that you may need for your 3D artist's toolbox or not. This extension adds an extra 3.5 hours of videos to cinematic lighting course. These new videos are just super charged with the tips and tricks as for how to set up night lighting in Blender. Imagine urban nights, loneliness in the mega-polis, shining with constellations of colorful lights everywhere, making you effectively feel even more on your own. Imagine a tiny, teensy bit of cyberpunk as well. Basically, it's gonna be what you see on your screen right now. You'll be able to reproduce these visuals and more importantly, I guess, you'll learn how to apply these techniques in your own night scenes in Blender, in your own art. In the first chapter, you'll get to know the essentials of the image-based lighting in Blender. It is a really easy and yet so powerful lighting technique that takes the colors from any image and emits these colors as light. It is a must-have technique that allows you to extract the lighting information from practically any image on the internet and then apply it to your 3D scene as lighting. It doesn't come without an issue though. Usually the standard 8-bit JPEGs and PNGs just lack the dynamic range that would make this technique really shine. So we will learn how to HDRify any images, turn GPEGs into high dynamic range images in other words, in a few clicks to get most out of it. So this is your first chapter, image-based lighting in a laid-back way. The second chapter though is gonna be more extensive and in-depth. go through a step-by-step lighting guide for a complete night shot. It will involve multiple layers and tools, each serving a specific purpose in the setup. It's not gonna be as straightforward and laid-back as the first one, let's say, so you'll definitely need a few hours at least to go from beginning to end, and potentially a few stops on the way to catch the breath and grab a coffee as well. This tutorial will be split into manageable parts though, each one with a clear goal. You will be able to follow along and repeat the steps shown in the videos in the blend file, that is, of course, available for download. To keep it short, after watching chapter 2, you'll get the result similar to this, and you will learn how to set up engrossing night lighting in Blender using the power of cycles. Chapter 3 Image Projection It is such an interesting and slightly weird lighting technique that we will explore. Weird because you never know what you get. In this third and last tutorial from the Extension Pack you'll become familiar with projection in Blender to generate pretty exciting multi-colored light patterns, both static and animated. We'll start with completing a really simple example, getting to know how projectors work and all that stuff, and only then we'll try a bit more complex one, involving this sim with that amazing model downloaded from Sketchfab. Don't worry if in the end you won't get the exact same result to what you see in how. There will be the blend file available to check, and anyway, some techniques just don't give identical results. If you are not sure that it's something for you, maybe you're afraid that it will be slightly more difficult than you can afford. We uploaded the first introductory chapter of the original course to YouTube some time ago, so check it out first. One more thing that I wanted to mention is that you'll also probably need a decent GPU to get most out of this series. Otherwise there's a chance that slower render times would spoil the fun as we use cycles for rendering mostly. The extension pack is free for the course owners, so if you bought the course, just check the resources once more. There you'll find all the videos and the project files. That was a quick rundown of the contents of the new and for sure super teasing extension pack to cinematic lighting. The blockbuster lighting course, all thanks to you and our amazing Blender community. Hopefully I answered a few questions and concerns you might have had, but of course as usual feel free to ask me anything. The course is available on Blender Market, Gumroad and CreativeShrimp.com. you can find it there.",
3
+ "segments": [
4
+ {
5
+ "text": " Hey, what's up, Gleb here! In the next 5 minutes, I'll walk you through the contents of the new and very exciting extension pack to cinematic lighting course. It'll make it easier for you to decide if that's something that you may need for your 3D artist's toolbox or not. This extension adds an extra 3.5 hours of videos to cinematic lighting course. These new videos are just super charged with the tips and tricks as for how to set up night lighting in Blender. Imagine urban nights, loneliness in the mega-polis, shining with constellations of colorful lights everywhere, making you effectively feel even more on your own. Imagine a tiny, teensy bit of cyberpunk as well. Basically, it's gonna be what you see on your screen right now. You'll be able to reproduce these visuals and more importantly, I guess, you'll learn how to apply these techniques in your own night scenes in Blender, in your own art. In the first chapter, you'll get to know the essentials of the image-based lighting in Blender. It is a really easy and yet so powerful lighting technique that takes the colors from any image and emits these colors as light. It is a must-have technique that allows you to extract the lighting information from practically any image on the internet and then apply it to your 3D scene as lighting. It doesn't come without an issue though. Usually the standard 8-bit JPEGs and PNGs just lack the dynamic range that would make this technique really shine. So we will learn how to HDRify any images, turn GPEGs into high dynamic range images in other words, in a few clicks to get most out of it. So this is your first chapter, image-based lighting in a laid-back way. The second chapter though is gonna be more extensive and in-depth. go through a step-by-step lighting guide for a complete night shot. It will involve multiple layers and tools, each serving a specific purpose in the setup. It's not gonna be as straightforward and laid-back as the first one, let's say, so you'll definitely need a few hours at least to go from beginning to end, and potentially a few stops on the way to catch the breath and grab a coffee as well. This tutorial will be split into manageable parts though, each one with a clear goal. You will be able to follow along and repeat the steps shown in the videos in the blend file, that is, of course, available for download. To keep it short, after watching chapter 2, you'll get the result similar to this, and you will learn how to set up engrossing night lighting in Blender using the power of cycles. Chapter 3 Image Projection It is such an interesting and slightly weird lighting technique that we will explore. Weird because you never know what you get. In this third and last tutorial from the Extension Pack you'll become familiar with projection in Blender to generate pretty exciting multi-colored light patterns, both static and animated. We'll start with completing a really simple example, getting to know how projectors work and all that stuff, and only then we'll try a bit more complex one, involving this sim with that amazing model downloaded from Sketchfab. Don't worry if in the end you won't get the exact same result to what you see in how. There will be the blend file available to check, and anyway, some techniques just don't give identical results. If you are not sure that it's something for you, maybe you're afraid that it will be slightly more difficult than you can afford. We uploaded the first introductory chapter of the original course to YouTube some time ago, so check it out first. One more thing that I wanted to mention is that you'll also probably need a decent GPU to get most out of this series. Otherwise there's a chance that slower render times would spoil the fun as we use cycles for rendering mostly. The extension pack is free for the course owners, so if you bought the course, just check the resources once more. There you'll find all the videos and the project files. That was a quick rundown of the contents of the new and for sure super teasing extension pack to cinematic lighting. The blockbuster lighting course, all thanks to you and our amazing Blender community. Hopefully I answered a few questions and concerns you might have had, but of course as usual feel free to ask me anything. The course is available on Blender Market, Gumroad and CreativeShrimp.com. you can find it there."
6
+ }
7
+ ]
8
+ }