PapaBlueMarlin opened this issue on Jan 29, 2001 ยท 9 posts
PapaBlueMarlin posted Mon, 29 January 2001 at 12:42 AM
Jaager posted Mon, 29 January 2001 at 12:47 AM
Increase your focal length to 55mm at a minimum, 80-100mm is better. ( I like 200mm, but I'm weird.)
PapaBlueMarlin posted Mon, 29 January 2001 at 1:14 AM
Thanks for the advice Jaager. But doesn't the focal length deal more with the camera than the figure? I change angles (and cameras) so many times to see which I like best. I think a morph might be a little more practical for me. PapaBlueMarlin
Jaager posted Mon, 29 January 2001 at 11:45 AM
It is a perspective thing. In your attachment , the stem, cutwater and gripe appear much closer and hence larger than the cheeks. Increasing the focal length will put them all in the same relative proportion. You are correct, this has nothing to do with actual morphs, I would be surprised to find that Trav has not already addressed this. Did you look at his site?
PapaBlueMarlin posted Mon, 29 January 2001 at 7:52 PM
No, I haven't. What is the URL?
Jaager posted Tue, 30 January 2001 at 12:07 AM
Morph World 2 ? http://morphs.bbay.com/
Jaager posted Tue, 30 January 2001 at 12:20 AM
If you really do not know about Morph World, then you have some homework to do: Go thru all of Lannie's links: http://3dmodelworld.com/poserlinks5.asp 6 pages of them. This will give you a bit of a view of the resources that are available.
PapaBlueMarlin posted Tue, 30 January 2001 at 2:36 AM
I've been to Morph World before...just didn't connect it with the name Trav
PapaBlueMarlin posted Tue, 30 January 2001 at 2:39 AM
I just looked at Morph World again and I didn't see what I was looking for... I'm going to try the other links thru Lannie's...