Forum: DAZ|Studio


Subject: Background image problem

Grimtwist opened this issue on Aug 18, 2005 ยท 6 posts


Grimtwist posted Thu, 18 August 2005 at 6:38 PM

Hi

Is there a way to the "lock" a background image in DAZ so that it does not distort when imported, or resize when I adjust the window size? I want to have a special grid behind my figure so I can be sure to get the correct proportions I need, using my grid as a guide, but the grid image is all over the place when I import it. Is there another way to ensure correct proportion, if this grid idea is not going to work out? I'm used to doing things the old fashioned way on paper!

Also, why is Michael approximately 9 heads tall? Wouldn't it make more sense for these figures to start out with realistic human dimensions prior to manipulation?

Thanks.


jestmart posted Thu, 18 August 2005 at 11:49 PM

I think we are going to need a little more info as to why you needwant a grid before being able to ffer suggestions. As to why Michael (and probably a good many other human models) is nine head tall is that this is the proportions most artist use. I believe Stephanie and David use more realistic proportions.


Grimtwist posted Fri, 19 August 2005 at 5:56 AM

Hmm. The standard human figure is an average of 7 to 8 heads tall for artisitc purposes (ensures legs are not too short), but rarely is it ever 9 unless you were constructing a basketball player or an angel of god. 7.5 is the standard that most artists are trained to use as an ideal human height, which the person or people who made Michael would have known. As for the grid, it is just a jpeg image, and is used as guide to ensure correct length of the limbs. It is a standard practice. After further experimenting, it seems it is not possible to do this in DAZ.


PickersAngel posted Fri, 19 August 2005 at 6:29 AM

Rather than importing it as an image, import a plane object with the same proportions as the grid image, and apply the grid image as a surface texture. You can then scale the plane object to the desired size.


Grimtwist posted Fri, 19 August 2005 at 6:41 PM

hey - thanks! I'll give it a go.

Message edited on: 08/19/2005 18:41


xantor posted Mon, 22 August 2005 at 2:49 PM

Most of the poser figures are 8 heads high, it is the ancient greek proportions for figures and artists often use that because it is supposed to look better in pictures.