7. Click over to the Filtering tab at the bottom of the panel. Set the Antialiasing to
PLD 9-Pass, with a Classic Reconstruction Filter. Then, click Adaptive Sampling.
Activating this setting tells LightWave to look for the edges to antialias in your
scene. The Threshold value compares two neighboring pixels, and a value of 0
sees the entire scene. A good working value is .1. You can set the value higher,
which lowers rendering time but performs a less-accurate antialiasing.
Note
While you??™re working, it??™s not necessary to have antialiasing on, but you definitely
want this on for your final renders.Although you have the choice of Low to Extreme
settings, it??™s recommended that you render all your animations for video in at least
Enhanced Low Antialiasing. Medium or Enhanced Medium Antialiasing can provide
you with a cleaner render. High Antialiasing is overkill and a waste of render time
for video. It might actually make your images look blurry.
8. Set Motion Blur to Photoreal, and then
check Particle Blur. Particle Blur is great for
this particular scene since you??™re animating
particles. You can leave the Blur Length set
to about 50%.
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