Forum: Poser - OFFICIAL


Subject: Making movies in poser 6

Circumvent opened this issue on Sep 03, 2005 ยท 12 posts


Circumvent posted Sat, 03 September 2005 at 3:27 PM

Does anyone know where I can get some good tutorials on how to make a movie in Poser 6? Thanks in advance. Adrian


xantor posted Sun, 04 September 2005 at 12:39 AM

Do you want to make a movie or an animation? A movie would take years to render at dvd quality but at cinema quality it would take much longer.


Casette posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 5:01 AM

bookmarked Im interested too. Ive heard that you can create the scenes with Poser, but you cant mix a short movie with it... its true?


CASETTE
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"Poser isn't a SOFTWARE... it's a RELIGION!"


xantor posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 5:54 AM

You could make a short movie, if you split the renders into different scenes it would make it much easier to do.


Casette posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 6:06 AM

And assamble the scenes? (I have Windows2000 so I havent XPs Movie Maker)


CASETTE
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"Poser isn't a SOFTWARE... it's a RELIGION!"


xantor posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 7:01 AM

Other programs like videomach can combine avi files (or screens) together to make a longer film. Virtualdub can probably do that as well and it is free.


Circumvent posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 1:44 PM

I just want to make short animations which shouldn't take to long to render. I'm intersted but don't know how to make one using that feature in Poser 6. TIA. Adrian


xantor posted Mon, 05 September 2005 at 2:34 PM

It is quite easy to do, dr geep probably has a tutorial about using the animation timeline thing.


wolf359 posted Tue, 06 September 2005 at 5:24 AM

Attached Link: My workflow (8megs)

Just animate the indivdual scenes and edit them together in any video editing program i am about to start a new animated film using poser figures rendered in carrara



My website

YouTube Channel



Tguyus posted Wed, 07 September 2005 at 8:39 AM

To make DVDs, I use the following steps:

  1. Render animated scene(s) as individual images, using 640x480 resolution and PSD format.

  2. Compile into clips using Quicktime Pro "image sequence" loading.

  3. Combine clips using cut and paste within QT Pro.

  4. Save animation as standalone MOV file.

  5. Burn to DVD using Ulead Movie Factory 2, which imports QT MOV files.

If I need to match up sound effects exactly with video track, I import an AVI version of the animation into a video editor.

Good luck...


xantor posted Wed, 07 September 2005 at 9:10 AM

640x480 is not the dvd size, when it is converted to the dvd the ulead program probably resizes it to fit, giving you a poorer quality picture. For pal the correct size is 720x576 but I dont know the ntsc size, it should be easy to find out. Rendering to the correct size shouldnt take much longer to do.


Torulf posted Sat, 10 September 2005 at 7:14 PM

bookmarked This is interesting. Best to know before start. Else there are waste of render time.

TG