LonRanger opened this issue on Mar 20, 2004 ยท 6 posts
LonRanger posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 2:47 PM
I am working on an animated project where everything is in grayscale except for one character. I create scenes in Poser 4 and import them into After Effects, where I work with the color. Everything is very easy when the colored figure is separate from the grayscale characters (when it doesn't overlap visually), but when they overlap visually, I have to use intricate masks to control the color of the colored image, so that it continues to be colored while the rest of the image is grayscale. (I hope that all makes sense) Specifically, I have a scene where a dragon (a colored image) is biting the neck of a man (a grayscale image) and because they intermingle so complexly, it is a seriously labor-intensive process to overlay two images of the same movie on top of each other and mask out everything except the dragon in the top image and keep it colored (in After Effects).
My question is this: Is it possible to control the color in Poser 4? By that, I mean, is it possible to have one character in a scene which has natural color and to have the rest of the characters and objects be grayscale? If so, this would make my work much easier.
Thanks for any help.
LR
compiler posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 2:53 PM
You could use grey scale textures instead of couloured ones, may be ?
SWAMP posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 3:09 PM
Easy... Just open the textures for the models you want grayscale in an image editor (like Photoshop,etc),and convert them to such. Now just do your renders useing both those new grayscale tex's and the unchanged colored ones. SWAMP
SWAMP posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 3:10 PM
Really need a "crosspost" filter....sorry.
Little_Dragon posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 3:28 PM
In Poser 5, you could simply connect a Math_Functions node between the texture node and the Diffuse_Color channel, and the texture would appear greyscale.
Barbarellany posted Sat, 20 March 2004 at 9:28 PM
Don't forget your lights if you don't want color.