2017

Table Of Contents
To add a bloom to the scene.
1 Add and position a light to your scene.
2 Do one of the following:
Drag the blooming node from the node bin and place it in the schematic.
Double-click the blooming node.
A Blooming object is added to the schematic. In the Result view, you can see the bloom effect.
If there is only one light in the scene, the blooming node is automatically connected to it. If there are
several lights in the scene, select the light in the schematic that you want parented to the blooming
node before adding the blooming node. Otherwise, you can parent the blooming node to the light or
lights manually in the schematic.
3 Optional: To add a texture component, select the blooming object in the schematic, then double-click
a texture node in the Relighting tab of the node bin.
4 To display the Blooming menu, double-click the Blooming object in the schematic, or follow the tab
population rules for the Object menu.
Blooming with Texture Components
Similar to the workflow of the Lens Flare, you can add texture components to a blooming node to enhance
the effect. When using blooming in Stamping mode, texture components must be attached to see any result.
The Stamping tab of the Blooming menu has global settings for all attached components, but each component
texture has its own menu to control settings particular to it.
Be aware of the following when working with texture components attached to a blooming node:
Each type of component can be added multiple times to a blooming object, each with its own settings.
Some settings in the Basic tab of the component menu do not affect stamping, such as Number, Position,
Variance, and Seed. Only one instance of the texture pattern is used for stamping, so these settings have
no effect.
You can use the Border FX settings for each component to decide how the luminance of the objects that
the blooming is affecting modulates the Basics settings (Intensity, Scale, Rotation, and Ratio) of the
texture pattern. Centre and Spread are not used for blooming.
You can re-texture a component using a Diffuse Map with your own texture media applied. To do so,
select the component in the schematic, then select the media you want to use from the media list, and
double-click the Diffuse Map node in the node bin. In this case, the Pattern settings in the component
menu are not applicable, though you can still use the settings in the Basics and Border FX tabs of the
component menu, as well as the Diffuse menu settings.
Blooming Menu Settings
The Blooming menu is divided into two tabs, each with its own type of blooming effect, which can work
independantly, or in combination with each other.
Action Lights and Lighting Effects | 557