Forum: Poser - OFFICIAL


Subject: Why do most asian characters NOT look asian?

Maxi_Rose opened this issue on Dec 20, 2005 ยท 66 posts


Maxi_Rose posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 12:43 AM

I'm not going to name names or link images because I don't want to hurt any one person. However, why do a great portion, if not MOST, asian characters posted for sale, not look asian? Some look like caucasian or European women with asian names, while one I saw, claiming to be authentically Japanese based off of REAL PHOTOS(TM), actually looked black!

I also wonder where some people get their choices of names for asian characters? Some of them border on racially-offensive!

Why does it seem so many of the asian characters for sale these days look like someone grabbed a generic texture to slap on and twisted the eye-dials until the character's eyes are off-kilter enough so as not to look caucasian anymore?

Hasn't anyone heard of the epicanthic fold?! Don't people realize that, ethnically speaking, Japanese don't look like Koreans, who don't look like Chinese, who don't look like Vietnamese, etc?! I know actual Chinese, Japanese, and Korean people who are seriously offended by how some of these characters are designed or named, like caricatures or cartoon_people!

Someone help me understand whycharacters are designed like this while claiming to be "true, exotic asian beauties"?


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:26 AM

Because, unfortunately, Daz3d doesn't provide realistic morphs for Asian characters. They don't have the epicanthic fold, they just give it a lick and a promise of it, which is why any good Asian character creator should include custom morphs to allow for more realism. When I made Xie and JieJie, I looked at real photos of Asian people from various areas, specifically China, as that's where they're 'from', and based my morphs off of /that/, not what the main company had created. Miki is the only female FIGURE that has been created as Asian, from the start, and people seem to want nothing more than to turn her into an Aryan white girl with blonde hair and blue eyes, while not actually changing her face shape. This is just as innacurate as using the 'Slant' dial and claiming it's Asian. Each race has features that are unique to their ethnicity. Those of Asian ancestry will not have the same face shape as those of European ancestry. Native Africans will not be a default V3 with a darker skin shader used. As in the picture I posted... The one on the left is JieJie /with/ the custom morph. The one on the right is without. You can see around the lacrimals that even with the various 'Asian' morphs making 1.0, the DAZ morphs don't even come close to making a lacrimal. That bit of shading is /texturing/ on my part.

Kreations By Khrys


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:37 AM

Crud, didn't post the image! As you can see on the right, the eyes are SCARILY tilted. If I saw a person like this, I would take them to the hospital!

Kreations By Khrys


mathman posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:43 AM

Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?Form.ShowMessage=2163942

I tend to agree with you, Maxi Rose. I have brought this up before on this forum. One merchant (who I am told is asian) has put out a set of figures, while it is said they are asian, but they look more like they are Nordic !! Since then I have sort of worked out that part of the problem is that it is not only the eyelids that merchants don't quite get right - its also the wrong skin texture, the wrong eye color and the wrong color and type of hair. One thing that is very telling about asian people is that most of them have absolutely jet jet jet jet black hair (not dark brown), and their hair is very shiny and dead straight (see link to forum thread initiated by me). Regarding other Asian figures, as well as Miki, there is also Maya Doll (free), Satoko (in this marketplace) and Aiko (DAZ marketplace). In the case of the latter, you can set the realistic morph to 1, and play around with other eye dials and you can get a good asian lady. Good luck with whatever you do.

mkmike posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:46 AM

In my opinion, as an Asian guy myself, I've found that very very few of the morphs that available from the merchants out there don't so the justice of Asian people, except for the outstanding works of Khrys's Xie and JieJie, Idler168's Mei, Lani, and M3, and BATLAB's V3. Why can't we have more of the real looking Asian morphs of guys and girls?


Gongyla posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:48 AM

When you look atthe horrendous quality ofsome of the millenium joints (shoulders,...) I guess we all should be offended. Some people claim realism just because the texture map is based on photographs...

You're right of course. But money makes the world go round, and real high quality is rare.

Otoh "caucasian" characters are mostly o so recognisable when created by "Asian" vendors. (eyes!)

BTW: you think that Maya princesses only wore a loincloth? That all that metal protection leaving belly and breast bare is really useful in battle?

etc etc?

Hell, should "we", women not be offended by the way many guys here at R. portray us as milkcows? Yet why should we, as it is only their imagination, their point of view. And, objectively speaking, quite often rather good artwork.

Poser is fantasy.
Let's keep it like that.

There will always be someone who will be offended by something. Better is not to identify with an appearance because, well: why should someone be offended by the lack of insight and knowledge of someone else?

Message edited on: 12/20/2005 01:50



Maxi_Rose posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:57 AM

I know real caucasian women who get surgery to have "milkcow" breasts. I don't, as yet, know any asian ladies who want surgery to tilt their eyes funny. I have NO problem with anyone claiming their character is a "generic asian beauty", however, when they promise accuracy, reality, when they go so far as to even give her a specific_ethnicity, shouldn't she... look like the stated claim? Are you trying to tell me that it's ok to market a white-skinned girl with blue eyes and blonde hair, crooked nose, and no curves as an african-american figure? Isn't that called "False advertising"? Or maybe now we can market female characters with a penis and call it entirely female with no male parts? I'm not trying to pick on you, Gongyla. I'm just trying to understand why truth in advertising is such a bad thing in the Poser community?


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 2:02 AM

MKMike, I'm working on a set for David, but the texture will take a while, as I don't want to base it on Xie or JieJie's textures, as that will make him effeminate, something easily done to poor David, anyway. I have to agree with Mathman. Hair for Asian characters is hard to figure out, and skin tones are hard to make right. I grew up in a predominantly Asian community for several years. My friends were Asian. I was the ONLY white kid! (How I wished my skin would magically turn that beautiful shade and my plain grey eyes would reshape and recolor themselves!) It's difficult finding a skin tone that looks good in most lighting and doesn't look really unrealistic.

Kreations By Khrys


Cheers posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:15 AM

You are right Maxi_Rose; it is false advertising...and if anybody sold me anything claiming it was realistic and correct in detail and wasn't (based on the examples you described) I would make sure I got my money back...and I would probably make sure they weren't allowed to sell it again until it fit their description. Cheers

 

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wolf359 posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:17 AM

"Why do most asian characters NOT look asian?"

for the very same reason most Black "character" sets look like typical ,uber caucasion, unimess clones Painted brown.
the DAZ unimess figures are based on the aryan nordic Ideal
and have very little realistic ethnic morphs built in
and merchants who produce these characters dont bother to
make the effort to veer away from that IDeal
even when thay actually create a good Black person skin texture they cant seem to resist the urge to
give them bright blue eyes. oh well Message edited on: 12/20/2005 04:18



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operaguy posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:30 AM

Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?Form.ShowMessage=2116014

Asian eyes are NOT tilted. So, it is true that there are no people asking for plastic surgery to tilt their eyes. Unfortunately, however, there has been a trend in some parts of the world for those with Oriental eyes to remove the fold. This is tragic.

The curve of the Asian eye is different in three places, especially the upward curve of the bottom rim just before it meets the lacrimal.

Attached link, an animation, my early attempts to derive a Chinese female character in Poser.

Her name is Lin. That is her family name, a very prominent clan in China. Her familiar name is Xin Qian, which means 'happy and beautiful', making her full name in the normal Chinese order Lin Xin Qian. However, she lives in the West, and although she likes her full Chinese name, she asks everyone to call her Lin. Her lover calls her, affectionately, Xin-Xin, pronounced "tShin-tShin"

To create her look, I could not find a texture that looked correct to me. So I simply took an existing Occidental texture, studied the shape I wanted, and used my 2D editing program to alter the texture.

I believe the key to obtaining the correct Oriental eye is in the texture, not the morphs. The underlying model is P5NudeWoman with EJ morphs and much dial tweaking by yours truly. This effort is not "great" but is a 'working-towards.'

Anyway, I am not Asian, just a lover of Asian faces, and I welcome corrections to any of the above, and comments on the appearance of Lin.

::::: Opera :::::


operaguy posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:35 AM

I will add one thing about the morphs. The model "EJ" that I used has INCREDIBLE morph control of the eye shape. There are over 36 different dials that attack various sectors of the eye shape. I used these to fit my altered texture to the morphed shape. So I guess the morphs ARE important. ::::: Opera :::::


martial posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:35 AM

What about Miki from e-frontier?


steveshanks posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:36 AM

"Why do most asian characters NOT look asian?" Because Asian people are not creating them would be my best guess and i'd say the same may be true of Black characters, or on the other hand maybe they are creating them without really knowing the details that make the difference. I was studying a face of a russian woman the other day considering trying to create her face on steph 3, now to me she looked russian but for the life of me i have no idea why, i couldn't figure what features gave her that look. Personally i think there is a huge market out there for poser figures that look really different from what we have now, there is so much missing from the real world....Steve


pitklad posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 5:24 AM

I've made some test about Asian Face Shape on Nea's head using various photos However there are many variations and that's why I tried to catch a generic look... Also Eroko has a very original asian look...


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mathman posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 5:25 AM

Attached Link: http://market.renderosity.com/softgood.ez?ViewSoftgood=28772

steveshanks said : "Why do most asian characters NOT look asian? Because Asian people are not creating them would be my best guess" I beg to differ. Look at the attached link.

richardson posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 6:06 AM

LOL This thread should be fun. Yeah,,, why?


randym77 posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 6:21 AM

Because Asian people are not creating them would be my best guess

I am of 100% Japanese descent (though yonsei - fourth generation American), and I would tend to agree.

Though perhaps it's not so much the character as the figure. With the Vicky base, you cannot make a truly realistic Asian. It's not really DAZ's fault. Using morphs to turn a Nordic-looking mesh like Vicky into an Asian just doesn't work. Oh, you can get a fairly good result if you want the "mannequin" look, but the other head morphs no longer work correctly. I love some of the "International Beauties" morphs, but they don't work with the expression morphs. The face gets weird lumps in it, the teeth show through the cheeks, and the "blink" morphs look hideous. Basically, to do it right, you'd have to create all new morphs for the Asian head. (Which is what e-Frontier did with Miki and Koji.)

DAZ could do "ethnic packs" that include all new head morphs to go with an ethnic morph. IMO, their INJ/REM system is perfect for this. Obviously, having separate head morphs for every ethnicity would result in a huge CR2. But you wouldn't need them all loaded at once, and with the INJ/REM, you could easily load just the ones that go together.

The Japanese Poser users do make Asian-looking figures, but they tend to be highly stylized/idealized - sort of anime-looking. Miki and Koji are the only realistic Asian figures I know of.

Skin textures...there's a lot of variation in Asian skin tone. Very dark skin is not unusual for, say, Japanese who have settled in Hawaii where it's sunny and everyone wants a tan. In Japan, fair skin is still the ideal (plus there's a lot less sun). I would like some paler skin textures for Miki; the existing ones tend to be either dark, or not Asian at all.

I would also like some nice natural textures. Most of the ones I've seen have a ton of makeup. There's a tendency in Poserdom to have textures that look very "made up" - the kind of make up most women save for evening, when they won't be seen in bright light - or very "realistic." Pores, moles, blotches, etc. visible from 20 feet. I generally like something in between. Most women wear at least subtle make up when they are out in public - enough to cover any blatant blemishes. Besides, makeup tends to look very dated, since styles in makeup change so much. I want pretty but not necessarily contemporary.


steveshanks posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 7:49 AM

And i beg to differ back :o) that set doesn't look Asian to me, its a nice set you'll get no argument there but it not there for me, Steve


Cheers posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 7:58 AM

Steve, there are a number of things that make Russian women look different, but one of the main things is the distance between the top of the lip and bottom of the nose is greater...and I have a feeling that may make the cheek bones more pronounced.

Cheers

Message edited on: 12/20/2005 08:13

 

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randym77 posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 8:29 AM

And i beg to differ back :o) that set doesn't look Asian to me,

I think that was his point. The merchant is Asian (or so I assume, from his/her products and English skills).

To me that character does look Asian, but more like current Asian popular art than like a realistic person. Sort of like An-An and characters of that ilk. Definitely not Western-looking, but not realistic, either. Not intended to be realistic.


Chippsyann posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 10:30 AM

This is a intresting post, I just recently purchased a "Asian type" character, but now this post has me wondering how real is it? This is the product: http://market.renderosity.com/softgood.ez?ViewSoftgood=41068 And this is what I've done with it: http://www.renderosity.com/viewed.ez?galleryid=1106486&Start=1&Artist=Chippsyann&ByArtist=Yes PS: I too am still waiting for a real looking black character, not some hand dipped barbie doll.



infinity10 posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 10:43 AM

I do feel there is a lack of accurately Asian male characters. Fortunately, my projects tend to be pseudo-manga/anime type pictures, so realism is not such a bugbear. But if I ever had to achieve realism, I think I'd stick with Koji. Except he hasn't got the face morphs to transform him into another person but Koji.

Eternal Hobbyist

 


lmckenzie posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 11:27 AM

I think there's only so much you can do when starting from a generic base mesh. I'm surprised that the idea of using interchangeable heads hasn't caught on.

"Democracy is a pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance." - H. L. Mencken


Maxi_Rose posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 11:54 AM

Ok. I've got to name names. This one is bothering me. It's a picture from the gallery, but the picture is not my biggest concern. My biggest concern is the character's name. It's... Bong. This person named the character BONG.

Does anyone even look at actual asian languages or talk to real asian people for names? At least Khrys asks my fiance, who is mainland Chinese, for names.

For those who don't know, Khrys' Jie-Jie is an "older version" of Xie, Khrys' original asian character. She's like a big sister to Xie. Jie-Jie's name? It means... big sister.

Regardless of how "unasian" peoples' characters turn out to be, can people at LEAST try to give them REAL ASIAN NAMES? This is NOT like playing "asian music" on the piano by "hitting all the black keys". You do NOT start with a hard consonant, then alternate from vowel to consonant to get generic names like Koko or Kimiko, or grab a consonant and slap it onto the front of "ang", "eng", "ing", "ong", or "ung" for a name like Bong or Ling.

This topic heading makes me cry, but many, many of the replies are very thoughtful and considerate in their responses, and some good debate is going on.

It's good to see people talk about this so openly.

Message edited on: 12/20/2005 11:56


geoegress posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 12:07 PM

Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/viewed.ez?galleryid=1115647

Imitation is the highest form of flattery. We try. With respect. For me my closest contact with asians is liveing in the Philipines for a couple of years. With 400 years of spanish breading mix many many people have a more european shape to there faces. Along with the Polynesian charastics. A very lovely people :) (that character at the link is millgirl LE. And yes- I know the hair was washed out by the bright lighting)

randym77 posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 12:18 PM

While "Bong" sounds like an odd name to American ears, it actually is used as a woman's name (or nickname) in some Asian countries. The Philippines, for example.

And Kimiko is a pretty common Japanese woman's name.


pakled posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 12:25 PM

I think part of the names bit is marketing; if you don't know from Asian, you're going to need a bit of a 'hint' to learn that it's an 'asian' model. Be honest, if you saw something like (I'm making this up) Samarathanipa Lawantananag, would that sound Thai to you? would you know if it was or not?..;)
To be honest, you could go hungry as a merchant if you wanted only 'politically correct' people to buy from you. Not that there's anything wrong with being that way, but I would suspect as a merchant, that you'd be far happier with hundreds of sales, rather than dozens.
I think most folks are limited by the mesh itself; you'd probably need some real polygon-tweaking to get the look just 'right'. So for all those enterprising folks out there who have the chops to do it, by all means, go for it.

I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit

anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 12:52 PM

Pakled, I've never 'gone hungry'. I won't pretend that my sets are 100% accurate. I'm not the best texture artist out there, either. But I work hard and try to be respectful and try to create as close as I can reasonably get without completely remodelling the head. Xie is one of the best products I've ever made. JieJie is quickly shaping up to be a good selling product, as well. Do they look Asian? Not everyone agrees, because everyone's idea of what an Asian person looks like will vary. I've had people tell me Xie is beautiful but doesn't look Asian to them. That's fine. It's a hard balance to strike. And I agree with Randy, the expressions thing IS hard to allow for, especially since DAZ refuses to let people redistribute even basic expression morphs. Xie and JieJie both come with custom blink morphs to keep their eyelids from messing up when their eyes closed. That's the second-best solution. The best solution would have been for DAZ to allow me to redistribute the expression morphs, since literally anyone can get them from the V3 SaE cr2 file which is freely available for download on their site, even without purchasing her. As for being limited by the mesh... I always thought that was why DAZ didn't do very good Asian morphs on the Mil2 figures. It set up the stereotype people expect for Asian characters, in a lot of ways. I got to playing with M1 in my own morphing program and was able to morph a fully realized epicanthic fold with no problem. Now /that/ is sad, to me. These companies have all that really high end software, they've got lots of people working for them, with the software, and they can't do a little research.

Kreations By Khrys


bushi posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:40 PM

Attached Link: http://goldsea.com/Features/Beauty/beauty.html

An interesting article comparing and contrasting Asian and Caucasian features ...

AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:50 PM

I've seen similar comparisons in the past, but thank you for the link, this will help me in the future. :)

Kreations By Khrys


artnik posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 1:56 PM

I find the lack of basic anatomical knowledge very off-putting on a lot of figures. The slanty-eyed "so-called" Asians, annoy me. I wish people could be better informed about this. If I were Asian, I think I'd be somewhat insulted at the cartoonish idea of the exotic Asian. I also find the lack of basic awareness of Black pigmentation distribution another annoyance. Blacks are not just brown Caucasians. Artists who are designing figures should look at a photo of a Black person to see how hands and feet are really pigmented, for instance. There are tons of reference materials all over the web. Is it that difficult to do a little research on something you might spend hours or days on designing? Sorry, if I sound irked, but these are some pet peeves of mine.


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 2:04 PM

Same here, Artnik. Maxi was the one who pushed me, (seriously, she threatened my life!) to try harder to make realistic Asian characters for Poser. A lot of the content creators are middle class white people (like myself) who may not live in an ethnically diverse area. (unfortunately, like me, at the current time.) Some people don't realize they should do research. Others, sadly, just don't care, while others still THINK they have it right and are well meaning. The BEST way to make sure characters that don't look like their correct ethnicity is to not buy the character sets that look inhuman, or to leave constructive feedback, if you have.

Kreations By Khrys


richardson posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 2:22 PM

Maxi Rose, Nice thread! Be patient. Lots of people are working on "miki". Maybe she can even yield a chinese face with custom morphs. Chinese, I think the most beautiful and difficult.

2 miki morphs of many I hope to release next year(no names yet...lol). Or, my anglo- interpretation anyway...;). Lots of textures coming, I'm sure. Well,, wrong upload. lost it

Message edited on: 12/20/2005 14:28


artnik posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 2:28 PM

I, have lived in diverse areas all my life. I'm in the Chicago area, a real melting pot. I have come in contact with, and have had friends of all kinds of different peoples, ranging from Asians,where my old neighborhood now has a second Chinatown area, and a lot of other Asians, to my current area with a lot of Middle Easterners and Pakistani and East Indian peoples.

I have always lived in areas that were diverse and had a great mix. I love living where I can find everything from a Korean Grocery store to a Taqueria.

I lived for years in a Chicago area called Andersonville. That was, and still is known as, a Scandinavian area. Though there are many other Ethnic groups there as well.

Anyway, I've been in contact with all races, creeds and colors. I guess that's why I wish people would be less insular about their artistic ideas on some things.

Message edited on: 12/20/2005 14:31


rain posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 2:35 PM

richardson, she looks really good. I'll be watching for the release. I have an Asian friend named Kimiko.


mathman posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:04 PM

steveshanks wrote "And i beg to differ back :o) that set doesn't look Asian to me, its a nice set you'll get no argument there but it not there for me" steve - you've missed the point totally, the artist is Asian, the characters are nominally Asian, but they look Nordic. Have another look at what you originally said.


mathman posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:08 PM

richardson - is that a photo or a Poser render, because if its the latter its a fantastic job.


richardson posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:24 PM

P6 using face_off mainlight settings and shader. Quarker hair. Modified Tamela texture. I did the clicking. Are you serious? I still see cgi. Hope to fix that this next year.


AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:36 PM

Richardson, the ONLY thing I see wrong with her is her mouth. That's the only thing that REALLY gives it away as CGI and not, say, a lightly photoshopped photo.

Kreations By Khrys


Bobasaur posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:43 PM

Just to add to the discussion, I grew up in Japan (11 years out of my first 18). At the time there was a large American military presence there. The kids who were the result of Amrican dad/Japanese mom unions were looked upon quite disfavorably by the pure Japanese. However, when they got old enough, many of these "ainoko's" became very popular models. The mix of features was found desirable and attractive. It's interesting watching this discussion progress and the article posted by bushi was excellent.

Before they made me they broke the mold!
http://home.roadrunner.com/~kflach/


Bobasaur posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 3:54 PM

Just to add to the discussion, I grew up in Japan (11 years out of my first 18). At the time there was a large American military presence there. The kids who were the result of Amrican dad/Japanese mom unions were looked upon quite disfavorably by the pure Japanese. However, when they got old enough, many of these "ainoko's" became very popular models. The mix of features was found desirable and attractive. It's interesting watching this discussion progress and the article posted by bushi was excellent. One thing of interest was that even within Japan there are variations. The Japanese from the Kanto plains areas (Tokyo and mid-Japan) had the features often considered most Japanese - picture Lucy Liu (without the freckles) or Go Go Yubari (the stunningly gorgeous schoolgirl killer in "Kill Bill"). I've also seen many Chinese with similar features, hair and skin characteristics. On the other hand the Ainu people from the northern part of Japan seemed more aboriginal. The Okinawans (southernmost Japan) also looked more aboriginal. There are variations within all races. If you really think about it, Angeline Jolie and Nicole Kidman are both caucasion but do they look alike? Would you say "no" to either? Unless, of course, you're happily married and deeply in love with your wife like I am. {grin}

Before they made me they broke the mold!
http://home.roadrunner.com/~kflach/


richardson posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:05 PM

Khrys, Agree on the mouth. Then there are the nostrils, the cheeks that need gravity. Some asymmetry. Eyeflicker. Folds in neck...the more you try the more you find. Here's one with the very difficult epicanthic fold(now I can spell it). Needs more work. Anyway,, a subject that I strive to help with next year.

AlleyKatArt posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:15 PM

If ever you need help, Richardson, lemmie know. I use a similar program to yours to do my own morph work. Miki's a great character, as is Koji, though she's getting ALL the attention at the moment. Your character is quite lovely, by the way. :) And I really don't think anyone's saying 'All Asians must look like Lucy Liu!' or anything of that sort. What we're saying is that they should at least be close. It doesn't have to be /perfect/, for me, just... better than the DAZ only characters I've seen out there. Out of curiosity, would anyone be interested in epicanthic morphs, by themselves, for the various figures? As a product, I mean, not a freebie. I've toyed with the idea of doing a few styles as a stand alone product, but didn't think there'd be a lot of interest.

Kreations By Khrys


mathman posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 4:51 PM

Khrys --- I think a lot of people (myself included) would definitely interested in epicanthic morphs. Richardson --- which model did you use in that first image of yours ?


richardson posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 5:19 PM

K, 45 Why not? I think a lot of people would use it once they were aware of it. As a standalone? Probably not. But included in each product you release, yes. And I'll copy that offer to desktop.. Math, That's miki. But heavily modified in Zbrush. Bobasaur, lucky kid. If only all kids spent 10 years in another country,,, imagine


bushi posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 5:41 PM

"The Japanese from the Kanto plains areas (Tokyo and mid-Japan) had the features often considered most Japanese - picture Lucy Liu (without the freckles) ..."

But Lucy Liu is Chinese-American. ;)


pakled posted Tue, 20 December 2005 at 6:43 PM

..and any subject is open for discussion, except for the previous one..do I make myself clear?
-Kill Bill 1
..;)

I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit

anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)


AntoniaTiger posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 8:04 AM

It's maybe the same reason why some people almost seem to be trying to make a Caucasian Miki. She's got a far more real-seeming body shape than most Poser characters. It's maybe why SP3 and David look a bit more real than Vicky and Mike. But look at this page and tell me what reality Poser is trying to model.


GabrielK posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 7:21 PM

The two most obvious answers I would have come up with to the original question have already been presented. So I'll just echo them. :) Basically, V3 does have some limitations in the various "shapes" that can be gotten via the supplied morphs (and yes as also mentioned, ethnic varieties of any kind are affected by this fact, not just Asians). And also yes it's true that many people really DON'T know that Koreans, Japanese, Chinese, etc. are actually different races. ("Don't they all speak Asian or something? And they live in Asia, right? Huh...I don't get it!") And further, I also agree with the feeling that many "Asian" characters being sold are not very Asian looking at all. There was one in particular (and I may be thinking of the same character as previously mentioned in this thread), that was billed as an "Authentic Japanese" character but with VERY DARK skin, and IIRC no option for a lighter skin tone. I thought it was kinda bizarre myself. I'm also reminded of another thread I saw once wherein someone mentioned seeing an Asian character for sale, but asked why her skin tone was so light, and that it made her look un-Asian.


AlleyKatArt posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 7:30 PM

I know which character you mean, about the dark skin, GabrielK. There /is/ a group of Japanese women called ganguro, where they tan their skin DEEPLY and then have really light makeup and pale blonde hair.

Kreations By Khrys


GabrielK posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 7:43 PM

Yep, familiar with those. My point was that if you're going to market an "Authentic Japanese" character...well, I have no problem with a dark skin MAT or texture...BUT it shouldn't be the only option you have, if you still want to live up to the title of "authentic." Heck, even most of the "Goth girl" figures have options for normal skin tones. :) BTW Khrys, I think you put out a nice set with Jie Jie!


AlleyKatArt posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 7:50 PM

Thank you, Gabriel. :) I'm working on a Japanese female, now, for Stephanie Petite, and so far, so good. Would anyone like to see screenshots of the morph and offer feedback on what needs fixed? I'm always open for that! :D

Kreations By Khrys


GabrielK posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 7:53 PM

Ooooh I just thought of something. What if there were a darker and more insidious reason behind this trend of Asian characters not looking Asian? Humor me for a moment...

OK many people consider Asian "stuff" strange and/or exotic (particularly Asian women). So....

What if people are making Asian characters (the majority of them being female) because they are attracted to the "exotic mystique of the far east" but at the same time, they fear what is different...so they make something just different enough to be considered exotic...but not so different that it alienates anyone or makes them "uncomfortable."

In essence, different--but the same.

And this all works on a subconscious level because it's such an ingrained and inherent mentality, making it that much more sinister and insidious.

Hmmm...the conspiracy theorist in me likes it. But while I've always considered myself to be a cynical person, this is too much for even me to really consider. OK enough crazy talk, back to prentending I'm working!

Edited for: typo...yep no other reason...typo....really

Message edited on: 12/21/2005 19:55


AlleyKatArt posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 10:08 PM

So, this is my current WiP. Ignore the texture, as that's Xie's, and she'll come with her own. What needs fixed, in the face?

Kreations By Khrys


infinity10 posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 10:15 PM

lips do not have to be so pouty.

Eternal Hobbyist

 


operaguy posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 11:30 PM

Here is a close up of an Oriental eye. In my opinion,
eyes from the Orient have a shape commonly called "almond".
They are not round or plump-oval like eyes from the Occident
Additionally, there are three specific factors, numbered on the illustration.

  1. you've got to show the fold, which looks like a
    curved line. It has to have a very specific curve.
  2. the arch of the inward side of the upper rim.
    It angles down, then has a certain left-hand turn and
    points nearly straight down to the lacrimal
  3. the bottom rim has a unique double curve.
    emerging from the lacrimal, it curves up in a small arc before curving back to the rim.

The images below are from my website.
I picked these specific ones because the features
of the eye are fairly clear in them.

::::: Opera :::::


AlleyKatArt posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 11:44 PM

Thanks for the pics and the tip! I'm looking at my current eye shape. Here's a close up render.

Kreations By Khrys


operaguy posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 11:53 PM

In the images I look at, the fold arches up higher above the upper eye lashes. Also, while you have a slight inkling of the lower rim double curve, you will be suprised by the effect if you bring it out more. Your upper rim does not have the characteristic flattening followed by nearly-straight-down to the lacrimal. That is a sublte feature, but it has a telling effect. ::::: Opera :::::


AlleyKatArt posted Wed, 21 December 2005 at 11:56 PM

A/hah/. I see what you mean more closely, now. She's still very much in the work in progress stage, so thank you very much for your feedback. I'm trying to make her as authentic as possible, within my skill.

Kreations By Khrys


rain posted Thu, 22 December 2005 at 12:06 AM

I like her, Khrys. Keep going '-)


DigitalDreamer posted Thu, 22 December 2005 at 4:23 PM

And it's not just the Asian characters that are wrong. Load V3 and turn the 'French' dial in the '+' direction. before long she takes on Asiatic features. Oh and Khrys, I like the way she's looking, though the nose looks odd for some reason I can't yet fathom.

Message edited on: 12/22/2005 16:24


richardson posted Thu, 22 December 2005 at 5:01 PM

Khrys, If using V3, I found scaling head, hands and feet to 110%, stretching neck and reducing leg length, then reducing body to 93% gets away from V3 for a start. In your modeling app, you can smooth out the joint zones. Profile of face is the tough one. Especially when not using DAZ morphs... I like the effects so far but I know the body will be tough. Got the T shirt.


duanemoody posted Thu, 22 December 2005 at 7:43 PM

Attached Link: Original epicanthic fold morph for V1

(Eena above, not an Asian). This thread does my heart good. Back in the day, I did the first reasonably plausible epicanthic fold morph for V1/V2 (it's still in freestuff here).

The epicanthic fold is the result of a genetic mutation in Asians which makes a certain muscle/set of muscles weaker. Eyelids move in three dimensions and change their shape while moving in a way more akin to cloth draping than skeletal hinging, and Poser 4 just did not have the mojo to handle it.

The morph I built took a lot of magnets applied to specific polys and a lot of patience to come as close to a real fold that could open and close without passing through the eyeball. The reason I never did it for Posette was because I discovered the eyeblink morphs weren't symmetrical (no, really) and it wasn't worth my time.

As for the issue of slanting... I thought the same thing until a year ago when I was at the local McDonalds here in Flagstaff AZ. There was a counter girl there with deeply slanted eyes with the epicanthic fold, and it looked remarkable, not ugly. She didn't appear to be Hopi or Navajo, and I couldn't think of a polite way to ask.

As I've said before, you want accurate depictions of genetic diversity, don't expect it from a firm that exists in and apparently only hires from the state of Utah. Remember when we all said Michael 1's head was impossible?

Africa is a continent with enough racial types to make wars like the Hutus/Tutsis painfully real. Kenyans tend towards short, round faces with high browlines; Ethiopians look substantially different. Climatic adjustment, economic traffic, all these make a difference. Four morphs for V3 don't even come close. Add generations of American melting pot and it gets murkier. Richard Pryor on his first visit to Africa asked the locals which tribe he resembled the most; their answer was "Italian."

Watching Hi-5 on TLC, I could tell at a glance that Kimee was either Hawaiian or Filipino. She's both (her surname is Balmiero). During WWII there was a hullabaloo about the "obvious" differences between the Chinese and the Japanese which was as embarrassing as the Germans' racial math. Some differences are real, others aren't.

India is another example. Aishwarya Rai is gorgeous but she's clearly much more Asian/European looking than the average woman in the subcontinent.

Racial types are as subject to the Uncanny Valley as any other character design, only the negative reaction is experienced by a more focused group.


lmckenzie posted Thu, 22 December 2005 at 10:12 PM

"Aishwarya Rai" Ah yes, one of my desktop wallpapers :-) I remember some high end 3D figure modeling application that touted some kind of software "genetics" system that could provide inheritance and all kinds of amazing sounding features. With something like that and a good set of base types, you could go wild in creating all kinds of racial mixtures that are probably still illegal in some states.

"Democracy is a pathetic belief in the collective wisdom of individual ignorance." - H. L. Mencken


randym77 posted Fri, 23 December 2005 at 7:44 PM

In the images I look at, the fold arches up higher above the upper eye lashes.

Probably due to surgery. "Double eyelid" surgery is as popular among Japanese models, actresses, etc., as boob jobs are in Hollywood. While some Japanese women do naturally have "double eyelids," most do not. Often, you do not see any fold at all, or a fold just on the inner half of the eye, the eyelid is so small.

This surgery has been popular since the '50s. While it's true it was inspired by American ideals of beauty, it is not turning Asian eyes into Caucasian eyes. The results do not look remotely Caucasian, and some Japanese women do naturally have "double eyelids."

I would like to see a profile or 3/4 view, to better see what the eyelid looks like.

And I agree about the nose being off. IMO, it's the part that most needs adjusting. The bridge is too broad. This is disguised a bit by the overly long eyebrows. I think most women have brows that start at roughly the inner corner of the eye; if not, they pluck them. If the brows began at the inner corner, you would see clearly that the eyes are too far apart. And the reason for this is the bridge of the nose is too broad. While Asian noses do tend to be broad at the tip, they narrow (as well as flatten) at the bridge.

BTW, I do like the brows a lot, aside from the length. Nice, natural, dark brows. :) Message edited on: 12/23/2005 19:47