So would all materials that share this BRDF be "classified' the same then? In other words, the "interactions" (the BRDF) with the environment would be identical between material 1 and material 2?
And what gives the "illusion" of these two different materials actually being different materials would be the texture and the model (think... the tinfoil and the chocolate from lecture 5)?
yangbright-2001
We classify the object based on how the object interacts with its environment, this makes it render in such particular way by our eyes. Therefore, our eyes will be cheated by them sometimes.
So would all materials that share this BRDF be "classified' the same then? In other words, the "interactions" (the BRDF) with the environment would be identical between material 1 and material 2?
And what gives the "illusion" of these two different materials actually being different materials would be the texture and the model (think... the tinfoil and the chocolate from lecture 5)?
We classify the object based on how the object interacts with its environment, this makes it render in such particular way by our eyes. Therefore, our eyes will be cheated by them sometimes.