Death_at_Midnight opened this issue on Dec 09, 2004 ยท 13 posts
Death_at_Midnight posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 11:21 AM
Greetings all! I don't know if its been posted before: I'm interested in doing something with a dollar bill and having a real challenge trying to make it look real. I'm using a terrain with a scanned dollar image, but it's so flat. I'm hoping someone here would know either the terrain editor to share how to make such a dollar look bumpy and crinkled. I remember some time ago was a post concerning making carpet and many people replied with all sorts of tips, even new objects that was made to make a carpet look warped along the edges. I can't seem to find those posts. Was hoping to use the same techniques for paper money. Any help or advice would be really appreciated. Happy Rendering! --Death_at_Midnight
drawbridgep posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 12:43 PM
Can you post what you have so far? Might be easier to suggest something then. Ta.
pogmahone posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 1:28 PM
oooohhh.....I thought there was something or other in scanners that prevented money from being scanned, to prevent counterfeiting? That must have just been an urban myth.
erebus posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 1:44 PM
Not scanners themselves but the software that restricts scanning of money. Only newer software has the money scanning prevention feature. I use Photoshop 6 and have no problem scanning money (personal reasons, no counterfeiting)
Death_at_Midnight posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 1:45 PM
Erlik posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 3:45 PM
Message edited on: 12/09/2004 15:47
-- erlik
pakled posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 4:43 PM
I don't know about Bryce, but Dr. Geep over in Poser had stacks of money as props..you could look..I think they might even be in freebies..from awhile back..
I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit
anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)
TobinLam posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 5:19 PM
My scanner is pretty new and I don't have any problems scanning money. I was curious to see just how many of the details I could get and found I could blow up George's eye to fill the screen without pixelating. It's actually kind of creepy so I haven't done it again. I've always been wondering how to do paper, so thanks.
Zhann posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 7:05 PM
When we were buying our house I keep scans of all the Bank Cashiers checks we used to paid for assorted services, and just recently came across a printed version(scanned copy) in the house legal papers, and it was an exact match for the real thing, would have been nice to see if we could have cashed it. It was for $26,000.00 USD. sure could use that right about now....=)
Bryce Forum Coordinator....
Vision is the Art of seeing things invisible...
dvd_master posted Thu, 09 December 2004 at 8:23 PM
I remember that Photoshop CS had dollar protection, but a little app came out almost immedietly disabling it. There was a certain terrain, maybe rolling hills, that would sometimes really really resemble a perfect crumpled bill. Not rolled into a ball then flattened, but like it'd still been trhough a lot.
pogmahone posted Fri, 10 December 2004 at 2:14 AM
Someone (sorry, can't remember who) gave me a good tip for lowering things a tiny bit - do it in the attributes, then you can use amounts like 0.001. It's very hard to do manually.
Death_at_Midnight posted Fri, 10 December 2004 at 7:59 AM
Everyone, thanks for the responses! Your feedback has helped tremendously. Once again, thanks!
Ornlu posted Fri, 10 December 2004 at 2:27 PM