(29-12-2019, 12:28 AM)josemendez Wrote: [ -> ]...
https://www.dropbox.com/s/oz8pww6q17zz61...1.png?dl=0 - When mixing red and blue, obviously not black)
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/01/ed/b2/01edb...charts.jpg - I do not see black
Black can be obtained by mixing, blue + green + red, but I do not mix three colors, but mix two)
https://tehtab.ru/Guide/GuidePhysics/Lig...orsMixing/ - in Russian, but the whole palette is visible when mixing colors
I correctly understand that if I do not multiply, but add numbers, will I get the result that I need? In other words, Green + Red = Brown?
How do we change the blending mode, such as I pointed out above?
(29-12-2019, 11:54 AM)sc00b Wrote: [ -> ]https://www.dropbox.com/s/oz8pww6q17zz61...1.png?dl=0 - When mixing red and blue, obviously not black)
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/01/ed/b2/01edb...charts.jpg - I do not see black
Black can be obtained by mixing, blue + green + red, but I do not mix three colors, but mix two)
https://tehtab.ru/Guide/GuidePhysics/Lig...orsMixing/ - in Russian, but the whole palette is visible when mixing colors
All these examples use additive blending, they
add colors together, which is how
LIGHT behaves.
Not fluids (paints, inks, or any kind of pigment). When light passes trough a colored fluid (or glass, paper, gas, etc), certain wavelengths are
attenuated or
removed according to the media color. Light is
absorbed, no light is ever
added. That's why multiplicative blending is used by default. Using additive blending for fluids is not physically correct.
Here's a image illustrating both blending modes:
The website also gives a good introduction to color theory:
http://learn.leighcotnoir.com/artspeak/e...ry-colors/
(29-12-2019, 11:54 AM)sc00b Wrote: [ -> ]I correctly understand that if I do not multiply, but add numbers, will I get the result that I need? In other words, Green + Red = Brown?
Exactly. But pure green + red = yellow, not brown. To get brown you’d need dark green and dark red.
You can change the blending mode in FluidColorsBlendSimple.shader. Here's a list of all blending modes supported by Unity:
https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/SL-Blend.html
So instead of multiplicative:
use additive blending:
(29-12-2019, 01:17 PM)josemendez Wrote: [ -> ]....
Great) that you can change the mixing modes)
(09-01-2020, 03:23 PM)sc00b Wrote: [ -> ]Blend One One - this mode creates a red center and white in a circle, but in the end everything is white)
Make sure the background buffer is
cleared to black, not white. If you add any color to white, you'll of course get white. In additive blending, you need to start from black and gradually
add color to it. In multiplicative blending, you start from white and gradually
remove color from it. Like in the image I posted depicting both blending modes.
So in the ObiSimpleFluidRendererColored file I provided, change this line:
Code:
renderFluid.ClearRenderTarget(true,true, new Color(1, 1, 1, 0));
to this:
Code:
renderFluid.ClearRenderTarget(true,true, new Color(0, 0, 0, 0));
(09-01-2020, 03:35 PM)josemendez Wrote: [ -> ]Make sure the background buffer is cleared to black, not white. If you add any color to white, you'll of course get white. In additive blending, you need to start from black and gradually add color to it. In multiplicative blending, you start from white and gradually remove color from it. Like in the image I posted depicting both blending modes.
So in the ObiSimpleFluidRendererColored file I provided, change this line:
Code:
renderFluid.ClearRenderTarget(true,true, new Color(1, 1, 1, 0));
to this:
Code:
renderFluid.ClearRenderTarget(true,true, new Color(0, 0, 0, 0));
we use this shader, can you make the corrections we need in it?
(09-01-2020, 04:50 PM)sc00b Wrote: [ -> ]we use this shader, can you make the corrections we need in it?
Only thing I would do is changing the blending mode from multiplicative to additive, as told before.
to
That's all that is needed in the shader. The other change is in the renderer as explained in my last message: change the clear color from white to black.
(09-01-2020, 05:10 PM)josemendez Wrote: [ -> ]
We get all the white fluids, although it is red)
(09-01-2020, 05:24 PM)sc00b Wrote: [ -> ]We get all the white fluids, although it is red)
Did you clear the buffer to black, as I told you to?