Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom
Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 10 10:34 am)
Also- I have finally found the "hidden" panel in Vue 5 that opens up a "Post Processing" dialog that allows you to do Photoshop-like Gamma and Color Corrections to the rendered image- things like "Warm Black and White" as seen in the top image. The Vue 5 manual says the corrections are done at a much higher bit depth than the final saved file. Not sure yet WHAT that bit depth is- but I am guessing it is 64 bits...
I think a brand new software release that delivers photo-realistic imagery of Poser figures deserves to be noted in the Poser Forum. After all, Vue 5 imports Poser figures better than any other software- other than Poser itself. That's a pretty remarkable achievement. But the NEWS is that Vue 5 can deliver photo-realistic Radiosity and even HDRI (which I haven't tried yet- but will very soon). The other NEWS for Poser 5 users is that Vue 5 not only imports P5 dynamic hair and dynamic cloth, which can be animated, there is also a brand new expanded Materials Editor which very likely is capable of duplicating P5 materials- including Anime Cel Shader effects. I think because people have tended to think of Vue as the Landscape alternative to Bryce that they do not yet realise that Vue 5 is moving much CLOSER to a full blown Poser Figure renderer and animation package of incredible high quality. I really think thats Poser NEWS!
I made the original render in Vue in color because at the time I could not find where E-on had put the post-processing dialog. By the time I found it, I had already rendered the 2048x1536 image with Radiosity- which took a couple of hours... after which I found the new Post-Processing controls. However- you have to use the controls as a FINAL render adjustment step before saving the file. Once saved- you have to do it in Photoshop (or another app). But later I did test it on a smaller image and the Post Processing adjustments are VERY NICE and if you are interested in concepts like "Warm Black and White", or maybe very classic "1940's Black and White", these adjustments give you darkroom photographer type adjustments because you are working in a much greater digital bit depth.
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I did the MilCat on an Intel Motherboard P-III, 512MB RAM, ATI Radeon 9000, ATA drives- Windows 2000 Sp4... The link to my new HDRI Trice image (see link) was done on an Athlon 64 with AMD 3400+, 1.5 GB ram, SATA drives, nVidia GeForce, Win XPro Sp1. Obviously the second machine is faster, but it was tied up yesterday- so I used my P-III. Not bad as long as you don't watch the screen (watched pot never boils)...This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.
![file_132929.jpg](https://live.cdn.renderosity.com/forum/_legacy/file_132929.jpg)
My first Radiosity render of a Poser figure- the Siamese MilCat, done in Vue 5.I used the SUN as a light, with no other lights, just to see if I could get a Sunlight type effect without a whole bank of lights. All the Radiosity settings were default, except I also tweaked the Sun's shadow down to about 80%.
Image de-saturated in Photoshop to get it a "photo" type look.