Author Topic: A couple questions about reflection color  (Read 1897 times)

2020-12-10, 00:43:01

John.McWaters

  • Active Users
  • **
  • Posts: 292
    • View Profile
    • JohnMcWaters.com
Aside from metals such as gold and other metallic surfaces, is it correct to say that most materials should be set to have a white reflection color?

And if the reflection color is set to white, how is it supposed to behave when a non-white light is reflected off the surface?


2020-12-10, 17:40:55
Reply #1

maru

  • Corona Team
  • Active Users
  • ****
  • Posts: 13793
  • Marcin
    • View Profile
When the reflection color is white = colorless = the light that hits the surface will be reflected with the same color. So if a red ball is reflected in a blue mug with white reflection, then the reflected ball will be sill red.

When the reflection color is non-white = colored = the light that hits the surface will be filtered.

In reality if there is a single material, it always (almost always?) has colorless reflection.
If a reflection is colored, it is usually a thin layer of some kind of colored medium. Imagine white plastic covered with a very thin layer of yellow transparent coating. The reflections on such objects will be yellow, but technically that is not a single material.
Marcin Miodek | chaos-corona.com
3D Support Team Lead - Corona | contact us

2020-12-11, 03:01:32
Reply #2

John.McWaters

  • Active Users
  • **
  • Posts: 292
    • View Profile
    • JohnMcWaters.com
Thank you Maru, great explanation! This is how I expected the color work.