Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 27 5:12 pm)
Attached Link: http://www.keindesign.de/stefan/poser/dof_p5.html
Stewer has a great tutorial and python script at the attached link :)"you are terrifying
and strange and beautiful
something not everyone knows how to love." - Warsan
Shire
Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?ForumID=12390&Form.ShowMessage=1768916&Reply=1784118#14
See posts #14 and #15 in linked thread.Hi there Antonia! You (or I) have great timing. I just put together a mini-tutorial/how-to on doing just what you want. You can scoot right over to the "Poser Python Scripting" forum and look for the "Restarted Wish List" thread. I explain my method at the very end of that discussion (as of 5/17/04.) I've also created a small .pdf file with a few screen captures with the same information in it. I'd be happy to send it your way if you want. Just send me a message here on Renderosity with your email address. Note that I'm using a Mac, but I believe the .pdf file will be readable on a PC without any problems. As a side note, there is a Python script which calculates the distance between the camera and whatever object/figure/prop/etc. is selected at the moment. This comes with Poser 5 for Mac, but if it doesn't come already loaded for the PC version, someone here can most certainly point you in the right direction. The method I came up with this weekend involves parenting a transparent plane parallel to the camera viewing plane. Moving that plane along its z-axis will tell you what the focal length is AND graphically show you where the focus plane will be. I'm trying to think up a way to show where the Near Focus and Far Focus planes can be displayed as well. Still, just having the Focal Plane visible is a tremendous help when setting up DOF renders. I hope this all helps! :) Lee
Thanks, folks. I think it's going to only be very approximate to attempt to show the limits of the depth of field, because it depends on final image size. Possibly the only way for computer art would be to base it on how much an out-of-focus point would bleed into an adjacent pixel. Phtotgraphy textbooks do give tables of depth-of-field for various combinations of focal length and aperture. Maybe we're looking at the problem from the wrong direction? Move the indicator plane to where you want the limits to be, note the figures, and set aperture and focal distance to suit that. This is, pretty well, what I'd do with a camera.
Attached Link: http://market.renderosity.com/softgood.ez?ViewSoftgood=21792
FDCalc here in the Marketplace works fine too, $5 won't break most banks.This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.
In Poser 5 the Firefly rendering engine has a setting for depth of field, which emulates the effect of a camera lens. With a wide lens aperture, some parts of a scene are in focus, some not, depending on how close they are to the distnce the lens is focused to. (Also depends on stuff like final image size, but if you want to know the details, go to the Photography forum.) My problem is figuring out how to set the focusing distance. It slows down rendering, so trial-end-error is hardly practical, though it may help get a feel for what the options can do. So far, the best method I can come up with is to put a dummy object, made invisible for the final render, at some point I want to be in focus, and then apply Pythagoras to the differences in (X,Y,Z) coordinates between the focus target and the camera. Am I missing something in Poser? Incidentally, for some renders I could probably get as good a result just by making a blurred version of the background image.