Print at Dec 18, 2025, 1:10:24 AM

Posted by GaudiGalopin3324 at Apr 16, 2024, 5:39:36 PM
Re: Apartment project with lighting by invisible hemispheres. I continue advertising
the big problem looks like this. Although I have placed a cocoon of two hemispheres around the lamps, the brightness of this cocoon does not allow the outer surface of the lamp plates to be brightly illuminated.


if these hemispheres are made brighter, then the wall next to the lamps will light up strongly, this is not necessary. What should I do? There is a way out, it is necessary to locally illuminate the leading edge of the plates from the viewer's side. Then the gray unpleasant color of the shape will become the desired saturation, but it will still remain a little transparent. That's how I arranged this group of hemispheres, each 3%.


The hemispheres lie on their sides and shine in the direction of the lamp plates. This light compensates for the lack of illumination of this part. And it doesn't change the overall picture in the room. It hardly changes). Local bright illumination
I want to say separately about the pillows! It is necessary to spend time and carefully push very thin long hemispheres on the side into the narrow slits. These pencils do a great job with blackness and get full-fledged reflexes, just like in real pillows on sheets. It is better to spend time on these micro-fingers, and get white linen. As a result, the problem has been fixed in a big way, it looks like this. The lamps are white, the pillows are more or less white, But no longer dirty))


the reclaimed room


The method of meaningful local illumination of transparent surfaces is very good and beneficial. If the backlight is done with an understanding of what remains transparent in reality, and what looks opaque and bright. It's all about the point of view and the location of the light sources relative to the viewer and the shape.