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Participant
September 15, 2019
Answered

Rendering shadows without a surface

  • September 15, 2019
  • 2 replies
  • 3086 views

Is there a way to render a shadow without the surface the shadow falls onto? The result I want is a transparent PNG of a rendered object with a shadow cast onto an invisible plane so that I can place it, in Photoshop, over any color and it looks great.

If I turn the ground plane off, no shadow gets rendered.

Thanks!

    This topic has been closed for replies.
    Correct answer TolchockMaltjik

    Yes, but do not turn the groundplane off. Just use a color background. Render to PSD. When in PS the groundplane is its own colorfill layer wich you can remove/turn off and there is your render with shadows and/or reflection. 

    2 replies

    Participant
    December 5, 2020

    What if it's not the environment / ground plane you wish to remove / render on a separate layer but an object / plane. If you set an object a base color that will be redered in the image. And if you make a fully transparent png image and set that as a base color that will render as white. I wish to use this technique for interior design / photo mapping and make planes to cast a shadow to but still retain the original background image. Could this be done?

    Participant
    March 11, 2021

    This.

    The ground plane trick works perfectly - when it's the ground you want to get rid of. But I have the same need, that is placing objects against a wall, instead of sitting on the ground (or a flat surface like a table).

    It's so close to providing this feature...something as simple as changing the orientation of the ground plane would go a long way, so that it's a wall instead of the ground.

    I suppose you could rotate your image 90 degrees so that the "wall" in the image is the floor in the app...and then just work sideways. But a control to flip the surface in the app would be so much easier and more logical.

    Ussnorway7605025
    Legend
    March 11, 2021

    you can vote for it https://feedback.adobedimension.com/ but yes just turning your camera 90O is what I do

    TolchockMaltjik
    TolchockMaltjikCorrect answer
    Inspiring
    September 16, 2019

    Yes, but do not turn the groundplane off. Just use a color background. Render to PSD. When in PS the groundplane is its own colorfill layer wich you can remove/turn off and there is your render with shadows and/or reflection. 

    Participant
    September 16, 2019
    That works perfectly. Thanks!