odf opened this issue on Oct 27, 2008 · 13933 posts
shante posted Sun, 15 January 2012 at 11:12 PM
Robyn
I understand all that dear, honest. I guess It did sound like I was criticizing Aphrodite but I really wasn't. I will be the first to enviably appreciate and thank the creative technically saavy vendors who give the community what they do. I wish I could accomplish what they/you all have managed to learn. I just can't and not from lack of trying.
As an example, some wonderful artist created a pair of dynamic socks, just for me, to use in my renders. Just reading the "simple" use instructions gave me a headache. I read those instructions three times with the Poser stage open and tried running through the drill and still could not figure out what he was trying to get me to do. I quit and closed Poser out and went to bed. It seemed like a replay of the use of Magnests in P4.
Which leaves me out of the loop using the cloth room. The same could be said for a lot of the other stuff most Poser users who have used the app as long as I have have come to take for granted.
i really can't believe I even learned to accomplish some of the digital stuff I have learned.
So, I am sorry if I offended any one here it wasn't my intent just jerking my knee until it knocks my teeth out with my this learning block as I choke on my envy for those who do manage to learn this stuff. :(
Quote - > Quote - I don't understand the value of your argument that you are trying to make a living as a Poser Vendor. Weren't there Poser Vendors trying to do the same thing before Injection Morphs were thrown at us by DAZ? I may not be the sharpest nail in the bag but I am fairly sure Injectors have not been around since Poser wormed it's way into our collective psyche.
They appear to be the standard now, though, Shante. Poser customers expect it. A Poser vendor sort-of has to go with what customers expect.
I've made morph targets myself... easy-peasy. Injectors I've only done a few, and NOTHING of the complexity that Ohki's accomplished. She deserves praise for taking on something that is significantly more difficult for the vendor to produce, not critique.