Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 23 8:11 am)
I think Futurama. Not only a brain but a whole, talking head would go niccely into this :o)
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You just can't put the words "Poserites" and "happy" in the same sentence - didn't you know that? LaurieA
Using Poser since 2002. Currently at Version 11.1 - Win 10.
Looks good! Interesting based on the replies, everyone imagines this at a different scale... One constructive critique... The water seems to have rounded edges inside the glass which gives it a meniscus appearance (like mercury does in a tube...) If this is very small scale, that might be accurate for a liquid metal like mercury, but water usually has a concave rather than convex meniscus. If it's a large scale item, the curve would be so small in reality, that simply making the top flat at the edges would have the right effect. I think you can improve the water texture also but you might have to make two objects - one top flat disk and another cylinder for the sides. I think the recent water tutorials really apply to looking at water from the top. The texture that you've used on the sides makes the water look very turbulent. It's actually a cool effect, and might work great in a lava-lamp type thing (maybe even with different colors!) One last tip - just before you're done, edit the glass reflection map - that's the standard P5 one, Just make something in photoshop (or similar program) that looks somewhat similar, but is a bit varied (so that your map is unique).
Err, yeah, I thought I recognized the turbulence pattern in that tank. _dodger's right, if you used my settings- it's primarily for a large body of water as seen from above. Water in a clear tank wouldn't be blue, but rather clear (remove the color blend channel and set transparency to almost 1.000), and would have no bump or distorion on the sides. When I do standing water in a tube or other container, I actually texture the sides of the cylinder of water seperately from the top, keep the sides smooth, and only add distortion to the top. Apart from that, it looks very cool!
I'm right!!! Err, what'd I say? Water in a clear tank wouldn't be blue But blue Kool-Aid would, and there's nothing better for keeping Hitler's brain alive inside a jar! But yeah, the whole chamfering thing doesn't work here. Unless that's goo with a very high surface tension. Just use a regular cylinder and break the top off (and just delete the bottom) for the water. I'd make it have several levels of cap if you want to make sploshing morphs.
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