Viz Artist

Version 3.11 | Published August 27, 2018 ©

Parameters for Perspective View

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Position

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Set the position of the camera along the X, Y, and Z axis. Default setting (1) and modified setting (2)

images/download/attachments/27788536/cameras_camera_position_1and2_anno.png

Direction

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Set the values for Pan, Tilt, and Twist. Pan set to 0 (1). Pan set to 15 (2)

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Lens

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  • Angle: Sets the Camera ‘field of view’ angle (1)

  • C. Shift X: Shifts the center of the lens on the X axis.

  • C. Shift Y: Shifts the center of the lens on the Y axis.

    images/download/attachments/27788536/cameras_fieldofview25_annos.png

Relative Position

Set the position of the camera along the X, Y, and Z axis, relative to a real camera. Entering a value in for X, Y and Z axis for the Relative Position changes the actual camera position values, but relative to its orientation.

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Stereo Settings

Available if set in Camera Properties (see the Configuring Viz section of the Viz Engine Administrator Guide).

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  • Eye Dist.: Fine-tunes for individual users. A higher value for will result in more depth whereas a lower value will flatten the image.

  • Conv. Plane: A higher value for the zero parallax distance means that objects will come closer to the viewer, a lower one will push the graphics to the back.

  • Method:

    • Off Axis: Creates a distortion-free stereo pair. This is the preferred option.

    • Method Toe-In: The cameras point slightly inwards towards each other so that the lens axes converge at a single point (“vergence point”). Objects in the same plane as the vergence point will show to be close to the plane of the image, with other objects seeming to be behind or in front of this point.
      These values must be set during production in accordance with the convergence values used for the cameras.

Focus

Focus settings are available if the Depth of Field parameter is set to Active.

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  • Focal Plane: Defines the distance between the camera and objects which are in focus.

  • Max Blur: Sets the size of maximum blur furthest from the camera. For example, a value of 20 signifies that a pixel is enlarged to a size of 20 pixels.

  • F Stop: Sets the F-Stop value (relative aperture): The lens model used by the depth of field algorithm mimics a real lens behavior

  • Grain: Defines the blur level.

Tracking

A camera can be set up to track the Position, and Direction or Orientation of a Container.

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  • Position Tracking: The position of the camera will be the same as the target containers position.

  • Direction Tracking: The rotation of the camera will be updated to always point towards the current position of the target container.

  • Orientation Tracking: The rotation (orientation in space) of the camera will be the same as the target containers rotation (orientation in space).

    Note: Direction and Orientation tracking cannot be used at the same time. The results would contradict each other (both of them result in a potentially different rotation value for the container).

  • Active/Inactive: Drag a container to the drop zone to automatically enable camera tracking. To disable tracking, click the Active/Inactive button.

  • Reset: Disables camera tracking.

Miscellaneous Buttons

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  • Lens File Calibration Editor: Opens the Lens File Calibration Editor.

  • Verbose: Linked to cameras in virtual studio. For more information about the Virtual Studio option see the Virtual Studio documentation.

Avoid Artifacts

To avoid artifacts, avoid using maximum blur levels which are higher than 30 pixels. A blur radius of 30 pixels creates rather blurry results which should be sufficient. It is possible to increase this maximum radius, but this would also increase the rendering time.

images/download/attachments/27788536/cameras_focus.png
Set the clipping planes in the range you really need for the scene. So if your scene has only a depth of 200, set the far clipping plane to 250 or a similar value. Since the depth of field shader takes the depth from the depth buffer, this causes more accurate results.

Try to avoid high blur levels for objects before the focal plane, as this can cause unwanted effects.

You can increase performance, but artifacts would show for blur levels lower than 30px.

See Also