Recent content by Hamedi

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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    It would give the scene a kind of perspective I'm not looking for.
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    I could think about it, but I want there to be a glass between the audience and the actors so they don't see them too clearly, like a fourth wall in theater, but actually placed there, to point out the Platonic idea of the world of forms, things like that. And at the end of the play, the actors...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    I'm ok with having mirrors, I just don't want the audience to notice them. The stage is supposed to be a kitchen, and the plexi, the glass door to the garden or something. I'm just saying if the object is not reflected through the plexiglass, the audience wouldn't see it on the stage, that's why...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    That's 99 percent accurate, thanks for the effort. But the object is the same place as the light source, the partition actually blocks the object from being seen. The yellow light is shone from the ceiling, so the yellow light and the red object in your demonstration are actually in the same...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    I would like to know if there are other materials that I can use. Or if I can coat the glass with a high refraction index sheet or something that can help me achieve the effect. The glass orientation is fixed, the object is fixed(or might move a step or two), but the overall production can have...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    The second pic contains an observer(the blue circle), a plexiglass in front of it at a position of 9p degrees. A light source (the green dot) which is blocked by a brown line (cardboard or something). The orange dot is the reflection of the light source lighting the actual object(the green dot)...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    To an observer at the glass not the green dot. The observer looking through the plexiglass sees the orange dot as the reflection of the green dot.
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    The first picture is the normal reflection rule on the glass which is the line drawn in the middle. The green dot is the light source, the orange one its reflection. In the second picture, the left dot is the same source, but I want it to be reflected on the right side where the right dot is...
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    Undergrad How Can I Achieve a Non-Direct Reflection Effect on Plexiglass at 90 Degrees?

    Hi. I want a figure, human, to be reflected on the other side of a plexiglass. Simple enough. But i want the glass to be positioned exactly at 90 degrees, but I want the figure not to reflect directly over thr glass but to be reflected on the other side, as if I've put the glass in a 45 degree...
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    Undergrad How Can I Create a Mirror Reflection Illusion?

    Thanks I'll try all that.
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    Undergrad How Can I Create a Mirror Reflection Illusion?

    Thanks. I considered that and nearly did it. But the problem is that when I leave the box open in the front the image is projected outside the box not in stead of the dimension left open. So I think another mirror should be placed facing the opposite wall or on the ceiling, for example. But...
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    Undergrad How Can I Create a Mirror Reflection Illusion?

    please be specific about the number of mirrors I have to use and how large they should be and what angles they should be placed at. And how much light and where should I shed. Thank you. I also made a stupid doodle which I thought might help