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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 1:43 pm)
Hi pazu.... I'll keep an eye out....I'm planning on doing a few reproductions of art like Parrish (actually Waterhouse, etc.) and I've been looking too. I haven't tried doing the cloth in Poser yet as I'm assuming I'm going to have to paint it to get what I really want. I'm using the exercise to FORCE myself to learn the skills. If I find anything good I'll post back. I'm thinking "Flaming June" type flowy is what you mean...or Tadema style? zai
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Thanks zai and randym77! What I had in mind is somewhere between Parrish's "Ecstasy" and Tadema's "Flaming June." Something that doesn't look stiff or like a fibergalss shell, which is what most Poser clothing looks like to me. It seems the Cloth Room is my destiny. It claims to have the features I would need, and I suppose I can catch up on my reading during renders. It's frustrating! I'm just starting with Poser and my ideas are miles ahead of my technique. Zai, I look forward to seeing the images you come up with!
Attached Link: http://www.excite.co.jp/world/url/body?wb_url=http%3A%2F%2Fhome.att.ne.jp%2Fyellow%2FRUBI%2Fgazo%2F
rubios sheet might be helpful.. it sure has lots of flowing movement! nettaAttached Link: my favorite cloth room tutorial
The Cloth Room isn't that difficult, and doesn't take that long to render. Hair takes a lot longer. However, I'm not sure it will give you what you want. Parrish's "Ecstasy" isn't really a natural depiction of cloth. You can get some nice effects in the Cloth Room, but the flowing, romantic look you're after is probably best achieved with some postwork. There are many tutorials on painting clothing. Check them out. That's how the best Poser artists do it. Start with one of those "fiberglas" Poser dresses, then postwork the flowing folds over it.Thanks for the link netta. Thanks for tutorial randym77. That sheet will be handly for running the tutorial, which requires a dynamic cloth object. It's a good thing there are tutorials out there, the Poser manual is a little thin. Yes, Parrish's fabric somehow escapes the laws of physics, but then again, so do a lot of things in Poser! I'm going to flail around until I discover what things Poser fabric does with grace and elegance, and then compose some images that exploit those strengths.
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Attached Link: http://parrish.artpassions.net/
I think you're on to something zai! Once again, you've shown that simple is good. You could also copy the figure parts to another layer and adjust things like blur, contrast, scale, etc. to get more or less pronounced effects. I suppose the figure could also be rendered by itself in the fabric colors with a folded fabric bump. Bring that into Photoshop as a layer, then rubber stamp from this special image layer to the final image layer. Even without the original figure, maybe an approximate stand-in could be used. Congratulate Elizabeth on the fine image. So pretty, it almost seems a shame to clothe it! pdxjims, lemme know when that package is available! Looks fantastic... Wonderful image, elegant and calm. The attached link is one of hundreds of Parrish image sources that come up on google. Nice draped figures include: Griselda Sleeping Beauty Reveries Girl by the Lake Daybreak etc. etc. etc.Rendo Store | Freebies | RDNA Store
Looks good to me! I guess the biggest catch with painting is that you get locked in to a particular lighting scheme for your render. My painting skills are nowhere near as good as yours. While searching "wedding photo" on ebay I've noticed lots of super formal wedding pictures with the dresses carefully arranged in front almost exactly like your image. I'd be tempted to do some rubber stamping from an image like that.
HA! My painting skills good....NOW you've got to be kidding..lol Actually Ive been doing Photoshop since it came out years ago but always in a professional setting like ads, retouching, dropping out backgorunds, replacing skies, product photos, etc, mostly for the automotive industry. I am just NOW teaching my self to learn to "paint" so to speak, using some tutorials I found here. I was given a wacom tablet by a friend over the weeked so I'm going to give that a try as well. One idea I had was to do some clothes brushes, sort of like the "hair" brushes by different people, mostly the Heavenly Hair which I just got. Take a look at those to see what I mean. Of course I'd have to make a decent image first!
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Attached Link: http://www.curiouslabs.com/article/articleview/31/1/93/?nf=1
Speaking of hair...here's a URL to a tutorial on using hair to make flowing robes! I got one of those new Wacom tablets the other day. What I found out is that over the years I unconsciously developed a drawing style based on dragging my fingertips on the mouse surface to sort of smooth out the mouse motion. When I went to the pen, I lost the smoothing and am having a hard time drawing a straight line or smooth curve! It'll take some relearning.Attached Link: http://www.poserpros.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=10856
Also interesting: http://www.poserpros.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=16342 http://www.fignations.com/jelisa/tutorials/drapery1.htmlRendo Store | Freebies | RDNA Store
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Can anybody point silly old-fashioned me to some nice, graceful, flowing, classical, simple, robe-like garmets? I'm thinkin' wind-blown Maxfield Parrish type things, rather than heavy Roman togas. But a toga would be a good start.
Or am I condemned to learning the fabric room on only my third Poser project?