Forum: Poser Technical


Subject: Re: creating custom morph targets

bowen opened this issue on Feb 10, 2003 ยท 6 posts


Jaager posted Tue, 11 February 2003 at 12:19 AM

The VM in Carrara should do quite well for you - it is a native vertex modeler - no size adjustment is needed - open the group, do the morph, save the group. When you first start, you need to do controls. Open the group and then immediately save it - do not touch it in the modeler. Apply this as a morph. If it works, then you can do morphing, if it does not, you need to figure out what you are doing wrong. 1) Never - Never - Never move the entire group in the modeler. Move the camera, not the group. 2)You can open as many groups as you wish at one time to do your morphing. Make sure you move both points at the seams identically. They must go in as a single group though - or rather, doing a copy paste to build is a pointless PITA. The trick is to choose the "open as single group" option. The groups are still defined = DC on a highlighted poly and its group will display. DO not use the middle option, you canonly get at one group at a time if you do, and never choose the open with materials for morphing - it makes materials = groups and the mesh explodes into many parts. But you should only have the groups you are going to morph, added ones just get in the way and slow things down. When you save out the groups - they must be save out as isolated groups . get used to: isolate/invert/delete/save/undelete If you are going to use MTM, the groups that have separate halves - like collars or shoulders are saved as the pair. MTM will save you 2/3rds of the work. You must isolate the individual groups with a TE or with Compose if you wish to mirror or swap the morphs. Since the newer figures are getting too large for Compose, I use the modeler to setup my morph stock. Make a folder for the obj files put a copy of the figure obj in it. Open the figure. Highlight a group - invert/delete/save/undelete and build a stock of isolated groups for morph stock. You can also do logical groupings - like collars/chest, hip/buttocks/thighs - saves future work. If you do use MTM you will also need to isolate each of the individual groups as a base - but understand that for MTM a group IS both sides, for the head, it is just the head, but for the forearms a groups is rForeArm & lForeArm. You cannot mirror if there is no symmetry.