Forum: Poser - OFFICIAL


Subject: Thanksfor help with making my poser renders have transparent backgrounds : ) pi

kim258 opened this issue on Jun 24, 2004 ยท 21 posts


kim258 posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 12:12 AM

THANK YOU! THANK YOU! WOW!

After a little playing i got it all figured out, below is the angel figure i wanted it for..as you can see the transparrent wings are preserved : )

i wanted to post this to help any one else like me that this would help, (i had to understand channels more)

o.k. here it goes: )

to get a similer image to the one below...

  1. render in poser on black background

  2. then save it in either tiff or photoshop

  3. then in the channels palet in photoshop select it

  4. then click, select> load selection

  5. then go back to the channels palet and close the little eye thing make sure all others are visable.

  6. now copy, paste to new canvas and your done : )

I am sure as you get better at this you may be able to shorten steps like not having to make a new canvas.

I am just so pleased at learning this that i felt compeled to share this info : )

Message edited on: 06/24/2004 00:13

Message edited on: 06/24/2004 00:15


kim258 posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 12:16 AM

here is the picture : )

xantor posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 2:34 AM

Nice picture. This method can also be used to have a lot of poser figures in one picture. Render foreground figures with the alpha channel and then render some background figures and the background and then put them together.


Silke posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 3:22 AM

Well... um... In P5 I simply save as a PNG on the default background and when opened in Photoshop it's transparent... just save as a PSD and done... Much quicker than messing around with alpha channels :)

Silke


SamTherapy posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 3:56 AM

Silke, that's exactly what I do. I used to use TIF until Ilona gave me the tip about PNG.

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promajo posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 4:49 AM

well, that's good to know, thx for sharing


Kristta posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 7:42 AM

Thank you for posting this. I was wondering how it would turn out. Thanks even more for posting how you did it. I will give this a try. Kristta


kim258 posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 9:05 AM

Well, Thanks again all and thanks for the added PNG tip as I have poser 5 : ))) I love it when I learn something new, it`s like for me my software got an upgrade!


kim258 posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 10:13 AM

That PNG thing works great!! and less work : ) thanks easy> render in poser 5> save as a .png> open in photoshop and wow! it`s done! Thanks again all, Kim

xantor posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 3:25 PM

Png files can be saved in propack too. Does anyone know how to combine two pictures in photoshop. If the parrot picture was to have another one as the background how would you do that?


ogarcia77 posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 3:55 PM

To combine pix in PS you put'em in different layers and then you can move them around (or scale them) as needed. You can also merge layers together.


xantor posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 4:17 PM

I actually meant how exactly do you do the merging I am a photoshop newbie


unzipped posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 5:23 PM

Select the layer you'd like to merge, right click and select merge down, or use the layer menu and click merge down. Also there's usually a merge all in the layers menu. Unzipped


xantor posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 5:33 PM

Thank you Unzipped.


unzipped posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 5:50 PM

No problem. The more I use Photoshop the more amazed I am at it (and I'm still on just version 5!), so it's always nice to share my pathetically limited knowledge of it with others. By the way layers are an amazing thing. Just for fun, take one of your renders, drop it into photoshop and make a couple of duplicate layers of your orignal image. Then play around with the different opacity and blending settings for the layers (hard light, soft light, screen, multiply, darken, dissolve, etc.) - you can get some really useful effects this way easily. Go extra crazy and apply different filters to your layers and see what happens. I'm finding that taking a base skin texture, duplicating a couple of layers of it and then tweaking the duplicate layers to different blending/opacity modes, adjusting the brightness/contrast and saving the result as a new texture can really punch up your skin textures, giving them some more intense depth, definition and variation. Anyway so many toys...so little time! Unzipped


shamanka posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 6:35 PM

Ummmm.... How do you do it in PSP?

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Silke posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 7:01 PM

Pretty much the same way as Photoshop. PSP supports layers. You just have to make sure that you create a new layer if you change something, either by copy / paste, or duplicating the layer. I'm not all that familiar with PSP anymore, but I do know their helpfiles were pretty good. Have a look if you can search for layers, that should give you the location and how to work with it. Actually, there may be someone in the 2D forum who can tell you a lot more than we could :) Mind you... I've just started to use Photoshop CS. Wow. There are a LOT of goodies in there now...

Silke


shamanka posted Thu, 24 June 2004 at 9:31 PM

Thanks, I got it. Here it is for anyone else who needs it. From what I can tell it doesn't matter the format. Go to Magic Dropper, right click on the color you want transparent. Go to selections then modify and then to transparent color and then click on foreground. From there select the object you do want and go to edit copy then edit paste and voila.

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xantor posted Fri, 25 June 2004 at 10:39 AM

This is a good thread. There should be more like this, about actually using poser or improving the ways that you can use it.


Vially posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 10:44 AM

PSP 8 went through a lot of effort to blow Photoshop out of the water. And they did, for about a month... ;D All of the layer commands found in Photoshop are in PSP, they are for the most part done exactly the same way (PSP 8 Even "Looks" like Photoshop now) This is not to say that there aren't differences, just that they are more alike than most people care to admit. (I used PSP exclusively until school "forced" me to buy Photoshop, now I use that almost exclusively) The learning curve between the two is nil, more of "Which menu option is that tool under," than "Dang I can do this in " Something I was curious about in the transparent wing things was... um... wouldn't it have worked to use a background that uses a gradient, and then just set the transparency of the wings? Or was it the background of the finished image she wanted transpaerent?


kim258 posted Sat, 26 June 2004 at 12:26 PM

Vially, That wouln`t have worked because the wings had some transparency to them in poser and, I know I can drop a 2d picture in poser ,but sometimes I want it on it`s own layer so I can use it other places, like coreldraw as an object. I also found that vue pro has the .png option and with some tweaking with the position of the tree, it was isolated as you see in the picture here.