sallyHoC opened this issue on Oct 06, 2003 ยท 10 posts
sallyHoC posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 4:16 PM
maclean posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 4:25 PM
If you're talking about saving the image from poser, you can choose the amount of jpeg compression in the save dialog box. Poser saves really lousy jpegs, even if you set it to the maximum (12, I think). If you have a graphics app like photoshop or PSP, I'd advise you to save images in .psd or .tiff format, then convert them to jpeg in another app. mac
stewer posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 4:29 PM
Just wanted to add the nudity flag, even when it's fuzzy.
JVRenderer posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 4:32 PM
There's a similar thread earlier with some answers: just follow this link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?ForumID=12356&Form.ShowMessage=1466430
Software: Daz Studio 4.15, Photoshop CC, Zbrush 2022, Blender 3.3, Silo 2.3, Filter Forge 4. Marvelous Designer 7
Hardware: self built Intel Core i7 8086K, 64GB RAM, RTX 3090 .
"If you spend too much time arguing about software, you're spending too little time creating art!" ~ SomeSmartAss
"A critic is a legless man who teaches running." ~ Channing Pollock
sallyHoC posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 4:36 PM
thanks again i will try that. I have photoshop.
FishNose posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 5:15 PM
Several things to check: 1. Make sure you have anti-alias switched on when you render. 2. Set jpeg quality to 100% when you export the rendered image. 3. Render larger - check what size you're rendering at in Render Options. :] Fish
sallyHoC posted Mon, 06 October 2003 at 5:37 PM
Thank You all alot.
rreynolds posted Tue, 07 October 2003 at 2:29 PM
If you save the image as a TIFF, it loses no information and saves an alpha channel that will allow you to load a selection in Photoshop to instantly select your figures if you want to paste them in another image.
elizabyte posted Thu, 09 October 2003 at 1:59 AM
Well, I wouldn't save anything as a .jpg right out of Poser. I think Poser does a horrible job. You can always save it as a .jpg from Photoshop, where you have much more control. I always save as a .tif, take it into Photoshop, do my postwork, and then save as a .psd (for future reference) and THEN save as a .jpg for web viewing or whatever else. :-) That way I end up with the "raw" render in .tif format, the layered .psd, and the .jpg image. bonni
"When a man gives his opinion, he's a man. When a woman gives her opinion, she's a bitch." - Bette Davis
Bobbie_Boucher posted Thu, 09 October 2003 at 6:37 AM
Just save as "psd," then load it into PhotoShop for any postwork. Then "save for web," and save as jpg.