3D Lighting: Types of Lighting and 3D Lighting Techniques
Lighting shapes the way we see the world. In both real and fictional spaces, we use lighting to set the mood and direct attention. Photographers, cinematographers, filmmakers and 3D artists must be experts at using lighting effects to either reproduce reality or stylise a scene.
Five types of 3D light sources.
Whether you’re just getting started with basic lighting techniques or you’re working on sophisticated arrangements, you must first understand the sources of light you can use when creating a lighting set-up.
- Directional light: This source of light emits parallel rays that wash an object as if the source is a distant one — like the sun. It strikes every element in a scene with equal intensity.
- Area light: This light source is defined by a rectangle with directional rays emerging from a specific surface. This sort of light resembles the light that would pass through a window or to replicate a studio softbox and creates highlights of specific shapes.
- Point light: A point light is a source that sends out light in all directions. Point lights can be used to simulate the light emitted by a lamp or incandescent bulb.
- Spot light: While a point light resembles the light from a table lamp, a spot light is more like a torch. The light shining from a spot is constrained by a certain angle. The intensity of the light diminishes the further an object is from the source as well as diminishing along the edges of the cone of light.
- Sky dome lighting: With this lighting choice, light washes down on the scene from overhead. It is mostly used for outdoor scenes to re-create the effect of the ambient lighting from a bright sky.
One-, two- and three-point lighting examples.
One-point lighting.
Two-point lighting.
Three-point lighting.
Four tips for creating realistic 3D lighting.
Lighting shapes the way we see the world. In both real and fictional spaces, we use lighting to set the mood and direct attention. Photographers, cinematographers, filmmakers and 3D artists must be experts at using lighting effects to either reproduce reality or stylise a scene.
- Study the real world.
3D lighting is an art and, like many art forms, becoming a master of it can begin with observation. Study how lighting changes during the course of the day, the mix of natural and artificial sources that light your world and how moving the light sources in a room can change its feel. - Keep it simple.
With an outdoor daytime 3D scene in particular, one or two light sources are often sufficient. In real life, the sun typically provides most of the light, so a sky dome can be used to simulate the play of light and shadows common in outdoor scenes. There is often no need for point, spot or other light sources. - Watch films.
Cinematographers are masters in lighting design. Beginners can learn a lot by watching films acclaimed for their cinematic techniques. - Play with implied lighting.
By lighting scenes with undefined sources just beyond the frame of your image, it’s possible to create an image that is at once both more mysterious and truer to life. The world will not appear to end at the edges of your composition.