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Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 03 12:46 am)



Subject: Clothing: props / dynamic


grahamastor ( ) posted Sun, 26 February 2012 at 3:57 PM · edited Fri, 10 January 2025 at 4:15 PM

Content Advisory! This message contains nudity, violence

file_478936.jpg

Hi all,

First off - there's an attachment with bondage and nudity with this post - please be advised. Yes I checked the box, no there's no violence but some people have taken offence to bondage in the past, so I'm just being clear.

That all said, often when I see (and buy) clothing props there are usually morphs for different levels of coverage of the clothing; sometimes, but not always there are more than one level of uncovering - e.g. OpenTop, OpenLeft1, OpenLeft2. As can be seen in the attached image the Top is more revealing on one side than the other. As a (beginner) user of Poser do I have to rely on what the creator of the clothing provides, or can I adjust the way the top behaves? Is this what dynamic clothing is for - to allow freedom of adjustment? I've tried using Magnets, but I have to tell you as a beginner they're incredibly difficult to use and often find myself reverting to a saved image over and over every time I attempt to use them.

Thanks for and clarification or advice,

Graham....

 


hborre ( ) posted Sun, 26 February 2012 at 4:39 PM

The description you provide addresses conforming clothing and associated morphs, if there are any available.  Those are inherent to the clothing as the vendor has provided, and you are pretty much bound by those (no pun intended).  However, you can modify those morphs by using the morph brush tool within Poser to make either subtle or drastic changes to the mesh.  Magnetics is another option.  Even taking the clothing object into a 3rd party modelling program could yield better results provided that vertices and mesh are not changed or severely altered.

Dynamic clothing is different, you need to enter the cloth room to apply such clothing to your model, but there is a lesser degree of having it drape as you would like.  The more complex the posing setup, the more frustrating it will be to get the desired results.


grahamastor ( ) posted Sun, 04 March 2012 at 4:01 PM

Hi hborre,

    Thanks for the response. I'll be sure to look for conforming clothing with more than one level of morphs.

Graham....

 


mysticeagle ( ) posted Wed, 07 March 2012 at 2:26 PM

dunno if it helps, but i have found that if for instance a dynamic cloth sags in one area or doesnt quite fit snuggly, applying a small windforce with a low spread value can really help push it into those shapes....also scaling the cloth down in size and changing the dynamic settings can be very useful..there's a useful tutorial basic mind you  at

http://my.smithmicro.com/tutorials/2313.html

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