geep opened this issue on Feb 11, 2002 ยท 14 posts
geep posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 4:27 AM
The test setup had a single cylinder with 5 horizontal "slices." Each slice had it's "Falloff" set to a different value from 0.00 to 10.0 as shown. The "falloff" values are constant for each of the 25 samples.
A cylinder was used because it has both a curved surface (x axis) and a flat surface (y axis) at a varying angle.
A single infinite white (100%) light
was located at x=0, y=0, z=0.
Shadows were turned OFF.
Anti-aliasing was not used.
This chart is intended to be a general reference guide only.
The transparency function can also be affected by object color, light(s) color and setting, texture color, bump maps, and reflection maps and settings.
This chart is not intended to be an absolute reference but a general guide depending on the effect that is trying to be produced.
The "Trans-Min" and "Trans-Max" values used are shown in chart#2 and were varied in 25% steps, e.g., 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%.
The "Trans-Min" is shown from 0% to 100%. (left to right)
The "Trans-Max" is shown from 0% to 100%. (bottom to top)
The 3rd picture shows the test setup.
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
geep posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 4:29 AM
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
geep posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 4:31 AM
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
leather-guy posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 4:48 AM
Beautifully planned & well-executed demonstration. Nicely Done!
PabloS posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 6:50 AM
This will be much used geep. Thanks for making the effort and sharing! Paul
movida posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 8:04 AM
It's in my archive, thanks geep!
pokeydots posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 9:19 AM
Thanks geep, this will come in handy!
Poser 9 SR3 and 8 sr3
=================
Processor Type: AMD Phenom II 830 Quad-Core
2.80GHz, 4000MHz System Bus, 2MB L2 Cache + 6MB Shared L3 Cache
Hard Drive Size: 1TB
Processor - Clock Speed: 2.8 GHz
Operating System: Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
Graphics Type: ATI Radeon HD 4200
•ATI Radeon HD 4200 integrated graphics
System Ram: 8GB
jwkub posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 10:18 AM
Thank you so very much geep! Ive been muddeling with transpsarncy issues over the weekend , this is just what i needed. THANK YOU THANK YOU ! Jeff PS: THANK YOU ! Happy rendering
droyd posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 12:34 PM
geep posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 1:27 PM
BTW - Re: copying the text. You can also "click" and "drag" to hilight the text you want to copy ...
then, right "click" and "copy" ... (see above)
Now, open your favorite word processor and "paste."
Voila! You've got text!
cheers,
dr geep <---------------------------------(feelin' kinda pastey)
;=]
Remember ... "With Poser, all things are possible, and poseable!"
cheers,
dr geep ... :o]
edited 10/5/2019
droyd posted Mon, 11 February 2002 at 8:37 PM
Hi geep, I got the cut/copy/paste thing down. I was just wondering if there was a way to paste it into a jpg or other graphics file in photoshop. Since the photoshop type tool is the only type related thing I doubt it's possible. Maybe the ol' "print screen" key is the only way. You know I must need glasses I looked for typo's and I still missed one, I didn't know texture had 2 u's! That must be the artsy fartsy pronunciation...
Lemurtek posted Tue, 12 February 2002 at 12:19 AM
Thanks Geep, useful stuff! Regards- Lemurtek
hauksdottir posted Tue, 12 February 2002 at 1:37 AM
Actually, I saved off Droyd's text page, too... with the idea of pasting it all into one document. Thanks, Geep, this will be very useful... especially since it is so neatly executed. Carolly
tasmanet posted Tue, 12 February 2002 at 7:09 AM
I got it into photoshop using the type tool use ctrl V You can just about copy any text by highlighting and using Ctrl C Paste using Crtl V Cut using Ctrl X