Forum Moderators: wheatpenny, TheBryster
Vue F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 30 8:14 pm)
I post prod stuff all the time, unless I want to submit it for pic of the day. I think it's a good challenge to try to do everything local to vue -- I know Guitta's wonderful images are never post produced--and I do try to do that. But I also don't believe in reinventing the wheel, and if I know I can paint the hair I want in 2 seconds, or get rid of an artifact like the hard edges around lips and eyebrows, I'm not going to avoid post-ing that. I've been using photoshop since version 1, and I've been painting since high school (1984, yikes), so I want to continue to use those skills rather than trying to replace them with new ones. I guess to me it's all about the finished image. MaryCanary
I was a painter long before I got my first computer. Though I've done Vue works without post, I find a great deal of satisfaction bringing a picture into Photopaint and using a lifetime of skills to make a picture that's truly my own. Even so, most of the time my touch-up is limited to making up for the main evils that 3D technology brings: lines that are too perfect and facetted edges. Most of the touch-up is done when there are objects that have been imported into Vue, such as Poser figures or 3DS files (buildings, cars, props and such) -SMT
I'd rather stay in my lane than lay in my stain!
I personally like it (post prod) mostly for doing the things I either can't do in Vue, or don't have the patience for, such as hair. I personally think that even the BEST transmapped hair still doesn't give me quite what I want. Of course, you run the risk of losing the 3D effect, if you're not paying close enough attention to shadows and light sources, but that's just like painting, and something you can get used to. My first love was drawing with regular graphite pencils and then later with charcoal and pastels and up to acrylics and oils...possibly the "standard" progression. I'm still pretty new to 3D CG art, and as such I find Painter 6 to be immensely useful. Were it not for that program, I would feel far less inclined to show off any pics I've made. I also love compositing and techniques such as painting one image into another. Like I said earlier, once my Vue render finishes, that's when the second half of the fun starts. :) Mike
Well, I'll ditto everything that's already been said here. I've been making art long before I ever had a computer, and although I've enjoyed favorite brands among my art tools, I never limited myself to using only Berol Prismacolors nor anything else. I've always used whatever works best for the image I'm trying to create. I think the only time an image must be created solely in Vue is if you want to send it to E-on (whose interest is mainly on promoting their product, naturally), or for technical/personal challenges or contests where the rules require the restriction. Art is all illusion anyway. The bottom line is that it's your artwork, so how do you want it to appear and what steps do you want to take to get it there?
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Hi all, I'm hoping to get an idea of how you all feel about taking a Vue picture into a post production program such as Painter, Photoshop, etc., and then calling it "finished" after having made some additions, fixes and all. Be honest! Personally, I have no problem with it, and for me, that's half the excitement-- the anticipation of what will come out of it. :) Cheers, Mike PS This has nothing to do with the pending Vue challenges I and others have proposed, because they MUST have no post production, since they are more an exercise in technique, and not meant to be some sort of art contest