Tag Properties

Cast Shadows

Receive Shadows

Sometimes it is useful to prevent objects from casting or receiving shadows, especially for technical illustrations. In such cases, disable these options.

Seen by Camera

Seen by Rays

In some instances, objects should be visible but their reflections not or an object’s shadow should be rendered but the object itself not. Of course this would be impossible in reality but it’s possible here.

If Seen by Camera is active all first generation rays, i.e., the visual rays from the camera from which the scene is being viewed will see a given object. Note that a disabled Seen by Camera option will not hide the respective object from view entirely because it will, depending on the settings used, still be visible in transparent or reflective surfaces.

If Seen by Rays is active subsequent (higher) generations of rays will also be calculated, e.g., those of a reflection or refraction. These higher generation rays can in turn be applied separately in conjunction with the options described below (Seen by Transparency, Seen by Refraction and Seen by Reflection).

From left to right: All options active; Seen by Camera deactivated; Seen by Rays deactivated; all options active, except for Seen by Reflection.
Tip:Note that a disabled Seen by Camera option will have no effect for an object located behind a refracting transparency. The Seen by Refraction option must be enabled.

Seen by GI

Enable this option if you want the object to generate global illumination. If you disable the option, the object will not generate global illumination. This setting has no effect unless Advanced Render is used (Cinema 4D Studio).

To enable or disable GI globally, use the Global illumination option in the render settings (Global illumination page).

Self Shadowing

Left, active Self Shadowing; right, Self Shadowing deactivated.

In some cases, it’s required that objects cast shadows onto other objects but not on themselves. Voilà, this is exactly what this option regulates – simply deactivate this option to eliminate self-shadowing.

Self Shadowing CANNOT be turned off when using Soft shadows.

Compositing Background

This option will cause the object to be self-illuminated yet still receive shadows.

The object in question (in our example below, the floor) must have its own material.

Suppose you are creating a car for a website. The website uses a white background and you need to render the car so that it appears to cast a shadow onto the web page.

Tip:It is important that the respective object (in this case the floor) actually has its own material assigned to it.

Compositing Background for HDR Maps

Tip:Note also the Shadow Catcher shader that can do pretty much the same but also works more flexibly in conjunction with the Alpha channel.
Note the GI shadows under the spheres

Enable this option if you want to integrate rendered objects in a Project that was illuminated using GI and HDRI textures (must be assigned to a Sky object). The Compositing tag will then usually be assigned to a Floor object. Light and shadows from the GI illumination will then be combined with the background image (in our example with an HDRI texture applied to the sky).

Seen by GI

Using this option, individual objects can be excluded from the GI calculation. For example, multiple Sky objects can be defined in combination with the Seen by Camera and Seen by Rays options: One for direct visibility, one for reflected/refracted rays and one for generating Global Illumination.

Seen by Transparency

This option relates to everything that influences transparency during rendering:

If this option is deactivated, an object with this Compositing tag setting will not be visible when behind transparent objects. This option must be disabled if you want to hide objects that lie behind rendered transparent objects. See here for more details.

Seen by Refraction

Choose from transparency and refraction. Refraction takes place when Refraction in a material channel’s Transparency channel menu is not equal to 1. Otherwise, Seen by Transparency will apply.

If this option is disabled, the object with this Compositing tag setting will no longer be visible behind transparent objects that have a refraction index.

Seen by Reflection

Last but not least, an option for reflection: If this option is deactivated, the object with this Compositing tag setting will no longer be visible in reflective objects.

Seen by AO

Here you can define whether or not an object should be included in Ambient Occlusion. If this option has been deactivated, the corresponding object will be completely invisible for Ambient Occlusion. That means:

Force Antialiasing

Min

Max

Threshold[0..100%]

Antialiasing is defined globally in the render settings (Antialiasing page). To override the global settings for the tag’s object, enable Force Antialiasing and set Min, Max and Threshold to the desired values.

The settings will only have an effect if Use Object Properties is enabled in the render settings (Antialiasing page).
The Threshold value you enter here is used only if it is lower (i.e. more accurate) than the Threshold value in the render settings. Otherwise the value in the render settings is used. This ensures the object always uses the most accurate Threshold. Likewise, the best Min and Max values are used.

Matte Object

Color

Activating this setting will do the following:

So, what is this good for?

Such functionality can be useful for compositing (i.e. combining image elements). Imagine a scene in which a tornado is passing over a bridge. In a normal production pipeline, such a scene would be worked on by several team members. Let’s say artist A is assigned to the highly detailed bridge and artist B works on the tornado. When the scene is later composited, bridge and tornado must be brought together. In such cases (this one being a simplified example) it’s helpful to render the bridge and tornado using several Multi-Passes, in which the bridge, for example, can be defined as a matte object. Having all bridge elements in the rendering as a single-color matte mask is then very helpful when compositing the scene.

Matte objects are always then useful when areas of the image(s) should be covered without having to use alpha channels.