Photo checklist

โš ๏ธ Warning: This page is severely outdated and does not represent current best-practices. I (Jenna Huntsman) will try to update this page as time allows.

Torley's settings (as of 2012-08-20) for awesome photo shoots used in official Linden Lab materials โ€” and for fun, as shown on Torley's Flickr photostream!

One goal is to maximize raw, as-is, in-Viewer visual quality sans bullshot.

A number of these are overridden debug settings which presume you have advanced Second Life experience, so go to Advanced menu > Debug Settings to enter them.

Rendering quality & performance

  1. Select Me menu > Preferences.
  2. In the PREFERENCES window, click the Graphics tab.
  3. Click Ultra on the presets slider to set most options to an exceedingly high level of quality.
  4. Click Advanced button to expose finer controls.
  5. Depending on the scene, you may want to increase Draw distance to 512. This is really useful for shooting epic city/landscapes.
  6. Uncheck Avatar impostors. This slows performance but makes distant avatars render more accurately.
  7. Click Hardware button.
  8. In HARDWARE SETTINGS window, make sure Anisotropic Filtering (textures viewed diagonally, especially at distances, appear sharper) is checked.
  9. Click OK to save settings.
  10. In PREFERENCES window, click the Setup tab.
  11. Set Maximum bandwidth to 10000 kbps. (It's defaulted to 500 for a long time, which artificially cripples the rate of data โ€” like textures โ€” transmitted to you.

Also, these debug settings:

Depth of field

Optimized for "creamier" bokeh and softer DOF appearance โ€” which has the side benefit of somewhat higher performance. Optional: tap Ctrl-0 a few times to zoom in and narrow the field of view, creating a more intimate relationship with the tightly-focused subject matter.

All of these are conveniently found in Exodus Viewer's World menu > Visual Settings, under the CAMERA tab.

HDR (color grading)

Available in Exodus Viewer:

  1. Select World menu > Visual Settings
  2. Click the HDR tab.
  3. Check all these boxes, from left-to-right: Deferred Rendering, High Precision, Gamma Correction, and Tone Mapping.

The following "recipe" is tentatively called "[TOR] Adv. Filmic Day Warm", which takes advantage of tone-mapping for a wider dynamic range. In other words, scenes don't look so flat.

After setting all of the above, click the + button to save this as a new preset. Name it as Torley has, or choose another name that works for you.

Capture

Recreating scenes

Sometimes, you'll do reshoots. And practicing due diligence in advance is a great example of when a little preparation will save you an imperial f@#$ton of pain later. At a minimum, these are the things you should do:

  1. Save your avatar/outfit! Also true if you create different variations on a single base avatar โ€” save each version and date it (or append the project name to it), it'll mitigate inventory-digging headaches. Torley prefers this convention: "(2012-08-22) XD-444 - Not Impressed Woman".
    • Also true if you edit the avatar shape itself for expression that can't be obtained with the stock, exaggerated animations. Like that time Torley was not impressed.
  2. Take note of what poses your avatars used, since pose balls/stands containing multiple animations often accidentally get edited/reset. Same goes for facial expressions.
  3. Save your sky (and water, if applicable) WindLight settings! Environmental lighting is a huge part of what makes a scene, and if you've taken an existing setting and varied a few details, like outfits, save those variations โ€” those nuances can have a dramatic psychological effect on the end result.
  4. (Exodus Viewer) Save your VISUAL SETTINGS if you varied these for cinematographic effects, and more importantly, make notes of what visual settings you used with which WindLight settings since they can be used in tandem. Having all these possible combinations may prove to be a pain โ€” it would be very useful if we had more of a "macro instant recall" in the future.
  5. You can also use FRAPS to conveniently take screenshots of the various visual settings windows.

Sifting through raw materials

Torley prefers Picasa for rapid image-browsing with its smooth scrolling, and FastStone Image Viewer for quick copying of selected stills to another folder (so that Torley doesn't accidentally delete or ruin the originals).

Experimental

Being tested, including tips from Strawberry Singh.

Please do not alter any of the settings below from their default values, regardless of recommendations elsewhere:

Useful references

Tip: Add yours here!