milamber42 opened this issue on Jul 22, 2001 ยท 13 posts
milamber42 posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 11:43 AM
whoopdat posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 12:32 PM
I'm not sure, but I think what you're talking about is that her arm is forward. I think if the shoulder was brought "Back" some more and the arms moved around a bit, that it would look "normal." There's a small variety of movements for Vicky that she can't do and you have to work around them or fix them in post it seems....
amp-three posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 12:37 PM
I dont have real expertise when it comes to such problems in Poser, but what I can tell you is that that is an easy fix in post-graphical production. Basically, a little brush stroke here, a slight blurring there, and voila. Perhaps not quite the answer you wanted, but at the end of the day, the result is the same. Well, thats my opinion at least.
stallion posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 12:56 PM
Is the antialias on in the render option?? if not check the box and then render
You might as well PAY attention, because you can't afford FREE speech
Botticelli posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 1:29 PM
Amp-three has a good suggestion. Many problems like that will come up in Poser. Fixing the edges on the characters is a normal routine and normally just takes a minute.
Schlabber posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 3:27 PM
Yes that's right ... I noticed this problem also when posing Vicky ... and you know I pose a lot ... Well - it's just a fact - that Vicky is far away from being perfect ... but this would be an easy thing in postwork ...
milamber42 posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 4:49 PM
Well, if Schlabber does not know how to fix it, then it looks like I'll have to try and do something in post-work. Easy for you artists, but not so easy for us amateurs. stallion, Anti-alias is set, but the render is at 250 pixels/inch.
Marque posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 4:51 PM
You should be able to fix that by useing the dials for the offending parts. Marque
Botticelli posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 5:20 PM
milamber42 posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 8:43 PM
Botticelli posted Sun, 22 July 2001 at 10:54 PM
atthisstage posted Mon, 23 July 2001 at 3:05 AM
Botticelli: Poser was not truly invented for rendering finished works. It was designed to demonstrate form so that artists can shape it into finished works in the post stage" Resp: And Bryce was designed to just do alien landscapes. It's not the limits of the tools, but how far beyond them you can go. In this case, you might have been able to correct the shoulder problem by just bringing the shoulder and upper arm back a bit. Not much, since the gap that's emerging isnt that big in the first place. A slight repositioning, and you probably would have been able to fix this.
Botticelli posted Mon, 23 July 2001 at 1:39 PM
That's a given. I wouldn't have bought Poser if it weren't a versatile and powerful tool.