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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 29 7:57 am)



Subject: Poser 5 Tearing or Ripping Cloth


philsmeall ( ) posted Tue, 14 September 2004 at 8:46 AM ยท edited Fri, 29 November 2024 at 10:17 AM

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HI: I want to do a rendering and animation where the charater tears off his shirt. is there any way to take a Poser type cloth object and add tear type morphs to it? I know that with magnets you can stretch parts of a cloth object. Phil


stemardue ( ) posted Tue, 14 September 2004 at 9:45 AM

I don't know of any way of separating an object into parts in Poser itself, so here's a clever trick to simulate that: have 2 identical clothes in your scene, one hidden. When the ripping sequence starts, make part of the visible cloth invisible and make visible the corresponding part of the previously invisible one. Then move apart the two objects for finishing the ripping. This works well also for severed limbs... grin


nickedshield ( ) posted Tue, 14 September 2004 at 12:42 PM

I haven't tried this but couldn't you use the grouping tool to create the tear and delete that group?

I must remember to remember what it was I had to remember.


duanemoody ( ) posted Tue, 14 September 2004 at 5:44 PM

The method employed by at least one vendor here for their unzippable V3 bodysuit was to group a column of polys from the neck to the navel, delete that group and through the careful use of deformers stretch apart the rest of the mesh. A nursing bra with cup flaps that lower could be made from a bikini top in this fashion. Remember also that props spawned from groups retain the original object's UV mapping, so a ripped off sleeve prop made from a shirt, while losing all its clothing characteristics and custom morphs will function as a separately deformable prop. Chief reason I can think of to do this is to save memory and rendering time; one of Shamms Mortier's bigger boners in his P4 Poser book was to suggest that the ideal method for combining two figures was to hide the body of one, the head of the other, and parent to keep them together.


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