bcoop opened this issue on Feb 13, 2017 ยท 5 posts
bcoop posted Mon, 13 February 2017 at 7:35 PM
Hi, I've created a figure that I want to rotate on a specific pivot point so that when the figure is flipped in silhouette it looks exactly the same back and front. I am rotating the figure 2 degrees at a time, rendering that image then exporting it. The end result will not be an animation but these separate files of the rendered images played one after the other (its so we can measure brain activity at specific points as the image changes). So far the flipped silhouettes do not match each other as the pivot point of the image appears to move. Any help gratefully accepted.
PhilC posted Tue, 14 February 2017 at 3:25 AM
You can define the figure's center using the Joint Editor. Alternatively you can load a prop, patent the figure to it and rotate the prop. Adjust the apparent rotation by moving the figure relative to the prop. Set the prop invisible for the render.
Hope that helps.
Allstereo posted Thu, 16 February 2017 at 4:34 PM
Hello bcoop,
The figure silhouette will look exactly the same back and front only under specific conditions. 1) You have to use the orthographic camera such as the front, back, right, left, top and bottom camera and 2) The second constraint is that the axis orientation of the figures should be at right angle with the camera. If you use the front camera, the axis orientation should be vertical. To know the orientation of the figure axis, open the Joint editor and check the orientation for the Body if you rotate about the body axis or the orientation of the hip if you rotate the figure about the hip joint.
To help you to generate the images, you can use my python script to be find in the free stuff section at:
Tracybee posted Thu, 16 February 2017 at 10:17 PM
PhilC posted at 10:17PM Thu, 16 February 2017 - #4297437
You can define the figure's center using the Joint Editor. Alternatively you can load a prop, patent the figure to it and rotate the prop. Adjust the apparent rotation by moving the figure relative to the prop. Set the prop invisible for the render.
Hope that helps.
How does one "patent" a figure?
PhilC posted Fri, 17 February 2017 at 7:05 AM
Sorry typo , parent.