Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 05 9:36 pm)
Attached Link: http://market.renderosity.com/~rhino/spiketuts/poserfigure/poserfigure.htm
Modelling clothes in Rhino is a whole different kettle of fish. If you need to create fairly close-fitting clothes in Rhino, the method used by most modellers I've seen is to begin with using the Contour command to build a series of curves around the parts of the Poser model you want to make clothes for. Then, you delete the curves you don't want, rebuild the curves you need in order to make them easier to work with and loft them together. Then you have a shape you can manipulate with control points. I've done this and it works fine, but it's tricky to get the balance right between enough detail to produce a good model and having too much too work with easily, so you need to experiment a lot. Although it's about creating a character rather than clothing, the tutorial by Spike is worth looking at because it uses the same initial methods. If you haven't seen it already, it's worth a look, check the link.I've tried the contour method (cheerleader top) and somehow the top comes out lumpy, so because I don't need close-fitting clothing, I was looking for an easier way. Thanks and I'll try yet contour yet again. However, f anyone has thoughts about an easy way to make loose clothing in Rhino, let me know.
You can use the box method in Rhino, but you need to know the program a bit better than 'learner' to do it. It involves adding extra thingsa that Phil's tutorial doesn't cover. Contour isn't just for tight fitting clothes. I make practically all my clothing with the contour feature. It's simply a matter of how you adjust your contoured curves before you loft. It's the pre work that counts :) Willowjune, if you get a lumpy loft, try using not as many contoured curves (type in 0.3 instead of 1 when contouring) or play with the smooth command after loft. Also, you can turn points on (pton) on your curves before you loft and edit them to your heart's content.
The SciFi outfit was really easy. The mapping came out default from Rhino. I just rotated, flipped, etc. I moved seams on the arms by selecting vertices and moving them (with the arrow keys for accuracy) to where they needed to be, but the overall flatness comes from Rhino itself. The reason is comes from Rhino like that is because of the way it's made. For example - if you make a simple straight skirt using contoured curves, then export it into UVMapper and don't change the mapping, you'd have a beautiful square map. I'd just rotate it upright (it might already be though) and resize it to best get 'square' squares (I use the color texture checker in Show Model to judge squares). The same thing applies to most things that come out of Rhino. Sometimes the mapping needs some 'select by vertex' movement but not often.
Attached Link: http://www.poserpros.com
Willowjune, head on over to www.poserpros.com. There are lots of Rhino clothing tutorials you can sink your teeth into :)Content Advisory! This message contains nudity
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I need advice from those who model clothing in Rhino. I bought PhilC's clothing tutorial but I don't see how to adapt it to Rhino (I'm not writing him as he says he models in Truspace, not Rhino). He puts a box around the model and then says to use sweeping (lofting, extruding) and moving points to create the new surfaces that create the clothing. I need a tutorial on exactly how to do that in Rhino. A cube or box in Rhino doesn't have control points, I learned when I tried to turn them on. Also, I don't understand how to loft or extrude with the box--where do the new lines come from. I'm baffled! Thanks in advance for your help.