Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 02 10:01 am)
I do almost all my renders in Poser. I find rendering in Bryce a pain because the textures are too much of a mess to get right and the colors are always washed out, no matter how much I tweak them in the materials lab, they still don't come out to my liking. It makes me nuts. What I do is bring a Bryce scene in as a background in Poser and paste to the background for shadows and play with the lights. Maybe not as elaborate as a Bryce render, but much less taxing on my nerves. As for this imagae, I really like it, but then, I'm partial to ancient Egyptian history and anything related, so I love it. Melanie
OK, Bloodsong found me out! The block isn't new, it does have a crack, but we lost the warranty so we're stuck with it. And I have an 'Artisan - Painter' as a WIP, which will be posted when he's presentable. He (and others) may be available as a CR2 before I'm done. So let it be written, So let it be done!
It also depends on what this work is being done for. If they're building the Pharaoh's tomb, it would probably be deep under the hills of the Valley of the Kings, so you would only have to put rough stone walls behind them, maybe with some sconces with flaming torches, as if the tomb was just in the beginning stages. There are a lot of possibilties for this scene. I would think a piece as small as the one the man is working on wouldn't have both a sculptor and a painter working on it at the same time. The sculptor would finish his part, then the painter would come in and do his part, whereas, if it were a huge wall of a temple or something, you would probably have a sort of "assembly line" type of operation going on, with the sculptors up ahead and the painters working on the earlier sections. There would be a logical order for the completion of the work. This is great and really does something for the imagination. Melanie
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