Forum: MarketPlace Showcase


Subject: An Introduction to Divine Poser

dwnaef opened this issue on Jan 26, 2009 · 8 posts


dwnaef posted Mon, 26 January 2009 at 1:52 PM

Attached Link: Divine Poser

![](http://www.rive-fantasy.com/DivinePoser/divineposer.jpg)

This post is about a new product in the marketplace I'd like to introduce called Divine Poser, designed to help create balanced and aesthetically beautiful renders in Poser.

As an artist you’ve probably spent months, possibly years, studying your craft. You’ve invested substantial amounts money in obtaining all the software to create stunning digital art, not to mention the countless hours of free time spent in learning how to operate it. As an artist you’d like to expose your work to as many people as possible, and do everything you can to showcase your artwork in the best light, and ensure that it’s not lost somewhere in cyberspace amid the millions of other images floating around unnoticed…not attracting any attention, not catching anyone’s eye…

Whether you’re talking about photography or painting or digital media, you have only a few seconds to capture someone’s attention. Art is all about communication. When a person looks at a picture the first thing that happens is they’ll automatically try to extract meaning from the image. There’s usually a focal point, which some artist’s call the “sweet spot”, that draws your gaze to a subject and stands out – a figure sitting at the water’s edge, a sunset, a lone ship drifting on the horizon, in a portrait it’s usually the person’s eyes. The subject is what the picture is all about.
 

Composing your picture is just as important a part of the artistic process as designing and drawing it.

How you compose and frame your picture is crucially important in how it will be perceived. A poorly framed or unbalanced picture, even one created with the most sophisticated digital techniques, may unintentionally create dissonance or tension in the viewer.

You’ve probably experienced this first hand yourself. You’ve spent hours setting up a scene in Poser using some new models and characters you just purchased. But after rendering it something about it doesn’t quite feel right? The models and landscape are beautifully detailed. The lighting is gorgeous, and the contrast of shadows realistic. But something seems strangely “off” about it, the picture’s conveying a certain unintended tension which shouldn’t be there, it doesn’t feel ‘balanced’, but you can’t quite understand how or put your finger on it.

In all likelihood this probably has something to do with the framing and composition of the scene. Poorly framed pictures can lead to a breakdown of visual communication, and create unwanted tension in the viewer.

For centuries artists have studied how to best frame their subjects, and exactly where to place the focus of their compositions. While there are no definitive rules when it comes to artistic expression, there are techniques that are well worth looking at.

That’s where using the Divine Proportion comes into play. Incorporating its’ principles into your picture helps creatively draw the viewer into your composition.

I came up with Divine Poser quite accidentally while trying to figure out a better way to compose some of my own scenes. I haven’t been a student of this technique for very long, but recently, I had been working on some scenes and nothing I was doing seemed to work, no matter how much I fiddled with the lighting or modeling or rendering, I wasn’t happy with the look of it. Sometimes I became so frustrated that I scrapped the whole project and started again from scratch, only to find myself once again - after more tortuous hours of post-work and trying different things out -  unhappy with the final picture.

I became frustrated enough with the whole process that I went back to studying the fundamentals of art and photography (something I should’ve been doing from the very beginning). That’s when I hit upon the idea of using techniques like the Divine Proportions and Rule of Thirds inside Poser, to compose my scenes using visually created graphs and diagrams as background templates. No such diagrams existed for Poser, so I decided to remedy the situation by creating my own. I never really had any plans to develop this as a Marketplace product, I created these templates primarily for my own use. But after experimenting with them for a little while, I wondered if this was something other digital artists could use in their own projects.

One interesting aspect about the Divine Proportion is that many great artists possess an innate sense in finding the focus of their compositions, seemingly without being aware of it. It’s impossible to know whether some of them used the Divine Proportions as a visual guide intentionally, or if the placement just felt natural to them. But knowing how to create a structured and well-balanced composition is an indispensible tool of any artists’ repertoire. Like anything worthwhile it takes some practice, study, and patience to master. Instead of haphazardly plunging straight into the scene you’ll have to invest some forethought into how to frame your composition, and figure out what you want your picture to communicate both visually and emotionally to the viewer.

Thanks for looking, and if you'd like to try out the "Rule of Thirds" template from Divine Poser its available in the "freestuff" section on my homepage here at Renderosity.