Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 09 3:46 am)
Assuming the doors are static parts of the mesh, several possibilities come to mind. Most involve modeling, but if you don't have access to or skills in a 3D Modeling program, you might check a good tutorial on using the grouping tool in poser. Create a group by selecting the polys of the door you want to open, then make that group invisible (conversly you can use a transmap to do the same thing, but I find the grouping tools easier). Use another simple prop of appropriate shape to simulate a swinging or sliding door. Hope this was useful . . .
If you just need an open doorway, you could make the door transparent. See? Lateral thinking, and look where it got me. :)
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
"That assumes the door has a separate material - which probably it does, but not necessarily" Nup. Transmap. :)
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
I'm assuming the doors are just painted on the texture, I don't have the firewire drive hooked up that has them on it right now. Trying to find a reason to do so, ya see.:))This place is one of those claustrophobic, paranoic places where people would ideally be peering out of half opened doorways with just a hand and half a face showing. Making it invisible-- some way-- I've never used the grouping tools so, who knows if my brain has the cells to deal with those-- then using a rectangle appropriately textured seems the most possible. Textures I can do so a transmap on the side where the door is located seems the most likely for me to handle. I can just wedge the rectangle in there at the right angle, I suppose. I had more sense and daring before I got disabled but-- did ya know your brain actually shrinks under chronic pain. Yeah, it's true and I'm living proof. Oh gods, I'm on Poser 5-- what works, single sided square or double? I seem to remember single sided. And thank you bunches for taking me at my word and not throwing a ton of tech stuff that would crush me. You guys are great. Emily by the way, it will take a long time for me to actually put this into action but if I can get the pain under some kind of control, I will eventually do it and show you here. Just have tons of patience.
It's at times like this when I wish we were all in a huge room together, so we could walk over and show the other person exactly what we mean. Still, we get there in the end. Usually. :)
Coppula eam se non posit acceptera jocularum.
There are two parts in this problem:
For making the hole you have some ways:
Probably is not any of these cases so you can do:
Message edited on: 02/19/2005 20:49
Stupidity also evolves!
You guys are great! I actually understood Hawke and Kawecki. Both!! You're right Hawke, I didn't have a clue where the grouping tool was. This actually looks possible. I'm certain this is a one sided wall. Though I could be wrong. There's no interior. There is a simple but kinda elegant rectangular door drawn on the outside so I can fudge that on very simple primitive I think. I can't believe I'm saying any of these things.LOL!I don't mind if this can only be seen in middle range-- and I certainly don't mind fixing in post. I'm one of those texture people who run kicking and screaming from modeling but-- Hawke-- you should do tutorials, lots. You're good. You probably have, come to think of it. what do I know? You're right, SamTherapy, but we did get there finally. I am so thrilled, god, I love to learn things. If I screw up, well, I come back and say, I screwed up. But I still learned today. Thank you so much again, Emily
I find it's easiest to use in 'hidden line' mode as you don't have to worry about selecting poly's behind something by accident and one's you have selected show up v clearly. If there are lots of small polys then it can become v frustrating v fast lol It's not the best tool in the world but it can usually cope with making holes in things :P
The grouping tool can do a lot, once you're used to how it works, but it has a few quirks. If the door is visible on the texturemap, you can do a lot with a paint program -- I use a quite old copy of Paint Shop Pro. What you're trying to do is take the texture map and convert it to black-and-white. The white parts will be visible, the black parts transparent, when the result is used as a transparency map. A dark grey is good for windows -- not 100% transparent. How to do that conversion? I'd recommend you look at how "layers" work. Put the original texture as the background layer, and paint the transparency map on another layer. If the doorway doesn't match the model's mesh, there's no advantage in using a UV template as a guide.
Thanks, Antonia, I understand layers. I've been using PS longer than Poser and am a 100 times more comfortable in it-- which is why I never mind postwork, I guess. That sounds like the easiest way to blank out the door. And get the black a true black.-- thank you for the window tip too, would not have thought of that. Emily
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Assume I am dumb as a stump cause it's true. I have several sets I love-- the Mars series and more sci-fi housing by that merchant-- none of the doors open. The sets would be 100% more useful if they did. I have no modeling skills or modeling program. No talent either. Hey, I'm honest. If it's dead easy or even close, I might be able to do it. Can someone help? Remember you are talking to a virtual blonde here-- heavily sedated as well. Emily