 OK, here we go. So we're going to set about making this sunglow. So what I'm going to do is just render this to show you the fact that it doesn't glow at the moment. So there you can see it's just showing the image as it is. Now, if you're working with the same file that I'm working with, you might just have to check when you render. Because originally when I rendered this, it just came up black. So I may well have done something to the file that causes the default light not to work. If that is the case, just create a new light as I have done here. There's my light by going to create lights and just create a new point light. And that'll make sure that you can see everything. So we've now got a sun that doesn't glow. So let's change that. So we'll need Photoshop or a similar photo editing application for this. We're just going to open the image. So it's in source images and it's the sky versus moon image. Okay, first thing I'm going to do is I'm just going to save it as something else. So I can't accidentally damage my original file. So file save as and I'm going to call it glow map. And I'll save that for now. That way, no matter what I do, I'm not interfering with my original file. What I'm then going to do is I'm going to find my sun. So I'm just going to zoom in on it. There we go. Because I need to create a white shape that is exactly those dimensions or as close as I can get it. So I'm just going to use my oval tool or ellipse tool it's called. So if you can't see that, just click and hold on the rectangle tool and choose ellipse. And then make sure your foreground color is set to white. And then you're just going to click and drag to something that's about the right shape like that. And you'll get yourself a white circle. Brilliant. What you'll do once you've got that is just right click on that layer and you're going to choose rasterize. And that's the sort of most difficult bit about this done. We then just need another new layer, which is this icon down here. I'm going to put that behind the ellipse layer. And I just need to fill this with black, which I believe is alt and delete on your keyboard. Okay, so if I now press control and zero, this is all I've created. So it's a black image with a white spot on it. Could not be more easy. What I'm going to do now is go file, save as. I'm going to save it as glow map again. This time I'm just going to choose target though. It is my favorite of the image formats and click on save. Okay, what you don't want to choose here is 32 bits per pixel because that might put a transparency on it, which we don't want. So make sure you leave it 24 bits per pixel. Okay, and that's that done. So I'll just minimize Photoshop. And then what we're going to do is assign the glow map to the sky texture that we created previously. So open up your hypershade, click on your sky material and you'll see under special effects, there's glow. So what I could do, just hide that, is I could just turn the glow all the way up. And then if I was to render it, kind of all the sky would glow. Which if you're kind of making it like your mountains are in hell or something, that might be appropriate. But I don't like it. So I only want it to make that one area glow. So I click on this checker box. I choose file. Click on the folder for image name and I'm going to add the glow map.tga. There it is. Click on open. And now if I just click back on this material, you'll see the glow intensity is turned all the way back up again. But it's only going to work on that one area. So if I now render again, you can now see that the glow effect is just coming from the sun. Which looks really cool. So when this is animated and we've got the camera following the plane, it's going to make that sun look a lot better. Especially if it ever goes behind any mountains at any point. Okay. So that's adding a glow to the sun. So we'll leave that video there. And in the next video, we will set about getting some cameras put into this scene ready for getting this rendered. Which as I'm sure you're already aware is going to look ace. Okay, so I'll see you in the next video.