Add Colour

Overview
The Add family of nodes allow you to add the colour/scalar/vector coming into the Main Input with the color/scalar/vector coming into Input 2.
With Add Colour the addition is component-wise:
-
Main Input.red + Input 2.red
Main Input.green + Input 2.green
Main Input.blue + Input 2.blue
In the example below, the Main Input contributes red values, and Input 2 contributes green values. Component-wise, the Main Input colour value is (1,0,0) and Input 2’s colour value is (0,1,0). The output of the Add Colour node is yellow (1,1,0).

In the image below, the Main Input contributes red values, while Input 2 contributes values ranging from black to green, or component-wise, ranging from (0,0,0) to (0,1,0). The output of the Add Colour node results in red wherever pure black occured in Input 2, because red (1,0,0) plus black (0,0,0) equals red (1,0,0). Wherever a shade of green occurs in Input 2, the result is a shade of yellow, because red (1,0,0) plus green (0,1,0) equals yellow (1,1,0). Shades of yellow exist because the Power Fractal noise pattern produces a range of values between 0 and 1.

Although it’s possible for a component value to exceed the visual range of colours from pure black (0,0,0) to pure white (1,1,1), this is not recommended. In some shaders, such as the Power Fractal v3 shader, parameters exist to clamp the component values at black or white. In the example below, the Main input contributes red values, and Input 2 contributes values that range less than zero and greater than 1. The Add Colour node will output values exceeding zero to 1 because the checkboxes for clamping the high and low colour values between zero or 1 are unchecked. The result is that colours on the terrain appear unnaturally dark, almost burnt, where the colour values are below zero. Where they exceed 1, clipping can occur or unnatural shades of colour, such as the magenta areas.

All nodes in this family have just one setting, which lets you assign a shader or function nodes to Input 2.
Settings:
- Name: This setting allows you to apply a descriptive name to the node, which can be helpful when using multiple Add Colour nodes in a project.
- Enable: When checked, the node is active and the Main Input value is added with the Input 2 value. When unchecked, only the Main Input value is passed through the node.
- Input 2: The values from the shader or function nodes assigned to this setting are added to the values of the Main Input.