Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 03 1:41 pm)
While I'm not at all against solutions for the various problems...I think the bottom line is you can't expect Poser to be the last step in a piece of art. You need to fix some of these things in PhotoX software, pure and simple. Or, wait about 6 years when desktop computers for the hobbyist will have enough memory to have a virtual human that is structured exactly like a Human Body..with skeleton, logical muscle action and the like. -Darth
I can only look at it and see if I can do anything. As complex as this is, if a solution is possible, even a partial one, it will involve a lot of editing/versions. Bye the way, The big muscle at the front of the thigh flattens as the knee is bend? Not much , but an effect there may be interesting. What do you think?
Yes it does. The quadriceps (the muscles in front of your thigh) are the equivalent of your triceps in your upper arm, whereas the muscles in the back of your thigh (biceps femoris) correspond to the biceps in your upper arm. Therefore, when you flex your knee, the quadriceps flatten out over the thigh bone while the biceps femoris thickens the same way when you flex your arm. The quadriceps thicken and become more well defined when you actually extend your knee.
The movement of the biceps femoris is actually seen best when the thigh is flexed forward at 90 degrees and you bend the knee joint. The muscle movement occurs midthigh close to the knee joint. You will see the curve of the biceps muscle appear to move backwards as you bend the knee back and forwards to flatten out as you straighten the knee. The upper half of the back portion of the thigh is more covered with fat and should form a smooth curve with the buttocks when the thigh is flexed at 90 degrees as in the sitting position. When standing up, the curve of the border between the buttocks and back portion of the thigh becomes prominent because the buttock muscle is not stretched.
Biceps femoris- It probably isn't that worth doing since the effect is subtle and easily missed. As for the quadriceps when the knee is bent, the visual effect is to just to reduce muscle definition. If there's just one single JCM with the hip-thigh joint I'd like to see, it's the effect on the buttocks in the picture above when the thigh is bent to 90 degrees or more.
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