Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 27 9:24 pm)
sure that is accurate but you do not need to go from 0 - 100 on hte scale what I do is drop the figure on the z and x and sometime y depending to about 90 or so till the body os completly under the clothing, then grow it to the default 100% on the coords that I changed at about 15 frames, and leave it running for the full default 30 frames for it to settle a bit. You may also want to consider using morphs in teh calulations as well. I have been considering with tight clothing to grow the breasts into teh clothing as well this gives sometimes nice creases in teh clothing between the breasts.
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Attached Link: http://www.philc.net/tutorialsIndex.htm
PhilC has a couple of tutorials on dynamic clothing at http://www.philc.net/tutorialsIndex.htm mikeAttached Link: http://svdlinden.xs4all.nl/poserstuff/downloads/usingdynamicclothing.zip
I've got a dynamic clothing tutorial in Word 2000 format. It isn't finished yet, but it does cover using scaling and morphs.The pen is mightier than the sword. But if you literally want to have some impact, use a typewriter
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a long time ago, before i decided to use dynamic clothing, i found a tutorial that i then ignored. It was about fitting dynamic clothing by using animating the scale of the character from 0 to 100, and thus, expanding the clothing along with it. now the problem is i dont know if this description is indeed acurate, just due to it being a while ago. Does anyone know of any such tutorial?