Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 1:43 pm)
Nice job, your techneque is perfect. One thing though you should keep in mind is that blood (For lack of beter word) is a 3D object, and is effected by lighting and light and shadows in the same way as the armor and figure is. it is also somewhat transparant when it is thin. Take what you have, and varry the shades of red to make some areas lighter than others and also add slight highlights. You want to do this while keeping the direction of the primary light in mind. once again though you technique is fantastic. If I were you I would paint it right on to the texture map and create a bumpmap to bring it out a little. Hope that helps. Regards -Gabe-
Get Eyecandy 4000 for Photoshop. It has a really slick drip filter with a lot of different settings, and if you use this texture for that drip, youll find that (with a little help) it can come out really badass. But filters and plug-ins aside, you really should get that blood darker. I dont care if its in front of a spotlight at the Oscars, florescent lighting, or just a MagLight with its batteries on the way out the door and not coming back anytime soon. Blood is dark. Hell, blood from a human liver alone is all but black. A color example of that would be #1B0202 (that says "#1B0202"; for all of you with bad eyes or monitors :-). As you can see I'd like to give a Pepsi challenge and see how many people say its not black. Normal blood color on the other hand is usually in the range of #600303 and #840505, though there are always variances. Stay tuned for other worthless pieces of information from yours truly...
IMHO the blood looks good. I agree it should be darker and normally you do not get a lot of bleeding while the object is still stuck in the wound as Carolly pointed out. Also, where the wound is through armour, most of the bleeding will occur underneath and will trail out at the joints and seems etc. However, never let reality stand in the way of good art. I have posed figures taken from pictures of people and animals caught in motion - the pose in the render is identical to the pose in the real life photo and I have had folks tell me the pose looks fake and that animals/people do not move that way, etc. Truth is sometime the hardest thing about Art (and Photography) I think is making the natural look natural. Rob
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