Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 29 7:57 am)
Hmm, it looks too much like water vapour to me, rather than muzzle flash. As for the shells, you'd need a magazine about 2 feet long for all those. :)
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
If she's firing that many shells as she's (apparently) moving across the scene, the shells won't be dropping like stones from that one position -- they'll be flying in an arc to match hers. The muzzle blast? It really doesn't work. Thin it out, make it look more forcibly pointed, and it might have something.
Check out: http://fp.minot.com/cobraydc/videos.htm for some video of a Mac-10 being fired. Will give you a feel for muzzle flash, smoke and casing ejection. Also give you a feel for the very real recoil of firing full auto. BTW, you may have to refresh the screen or click the "videos" tab once or twice to get it to download right.
It would also help to get the gun a little more visible. Against that chrome jumpsuit, it's almost invisible.-- I am using my crap monitor, still, many people have crap monitors. At first I thought she was dropping a handful of ammo and looking at a very low flying cloud. Dissappointed in the splitting of that suit around the crotch and thigh. Emily
The shells don't tumble down, they shoot up, out and back, like the other guys said. And they're hot and blackened. The flash is almost impossible to capture properly because it only lasts 1-3 milliseconds and a frame of film is usually 20 - 40 milliseconds. So you should try for a stylized look based on what the other guys said and forget about realism. With a fast-burning powder like in a 9 MM load, the flame is going to be more orange-red, but with a slow-burning rifle cartidge load it's more blue-violet.
I'm not a a firearms expert, but the the muzzle flash looks very different than anything I've seen. . .in the pic it looks like a brightly lit cumulus cloud. . .and its projecting straight forward. A number of weapons have "flash suppresors" which distribute the muzzle exhaust perpendicular to the barrel, at its end-- I have no idea if the weapon you're using does so, but its a neat effect, and widely used in firearms shots for film. . . Also, the exhaust should appear to be lit from within. . .
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