Tue, Jan 28, 6:28 PM CST

Renderosity Forums / Poser - OFFICIAL



Welcome to the Poser - OFFICIAL Forum

Forum Coordinators: RedPhantom

Poser - OFFICIAL F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 28 6:42 am)



Subject: Best tools in Poser 4 for newbie to master.


ralfielee ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 7:52 AM ยท edited Sat, 11 January 2025 at 1:24 AM

Was wondering which tools in Poser 4 are the best to master first. Alot of software has bells and whistles that in the long run aren't much use. I'm just looking for some expert advice on what basics to master first. I'd like to crawl before I can walk so I don't fall flat on my face. Thanks for your time. ralfielee


Marque ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 7:56 AM

Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?Form.ShowMessage=934392

I would suggest going through Dr. Geeps tutorials, they are excellent. I know that I am now learning about groups, animation and joint setup. Marque


cainbrogan ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 9:40 AM

Attached Link: http://www.animotions.com

Morph Master. Now you can develop hybrids of the many free characters available!


cainbrogan ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 9:43 AM

Attached Link: http://www.uvmapper.com

This tool exports Texture maps from meshes.


cainbrogan ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 9:45 AM

RSR Converter. you'll have to surf around, but with this you can turn any .pict(Photoshop) image into a Library preset thumbnail (.rsr), and vs. versa! = )


cainbrogan ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 9:46 AM

Hey back again! Then you want to surf around for a tutorial on how to export Poser motions to Bryce, There are a couple applications for this like Susanna, and Natural Pose, but they are'nt freeware. = )


cainbrogan ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 9:54 AM

Ca'nt forget Mimic, this helps make you character talk, from .wav files. This also is'nt freeware. Vue D' Espirit, imports Poser files. = )


Niles ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 10:02 AM

I am no expert, but if you are refering to the tools inide Poser, Try to learn about the "lights". When I started with Poser that is what gave me the most grief... lol it still does. Niles


queri ( ) posted Sat, 02 November 2002 at 10:19 AM

I'm with Niles. After you learn how to get everything on the darn figure-- clothes, textures etc. After you learn how to uncross the eyes, and get a kind of an expression and some kind of pose that is solid on the ground. You need to light it right. The wrong lights flatten everything, wreck the textures, weird up the expressions, etc, The right lights bring out the depth, the feeling, the soul. They are a pain to manage and I tried to learn them catch as catch can-- I used canned lights, I collected canned lights. I tried everything until Poser crashed and then tried more. I combine light sets, layer different lighting environments. Use one spot, two spots. If only that gawdawful little light dome thingey in the corner was relative to where your model was, I'd be sooooo happy but it's not. Even before you learn lights, though, develop your eye. Render a lot-- I hope you're not in Poser 5. Search the render for mistakes, is the cloth, hair, other body parts going through the body? Are the eyes focused? Render bigger than the display window more than once, it shows much more. Get anal about searching your render for imperfections or things that just aren't right. I'm going to be unorthodox here. Learn a painting program well and postwork your render. Blur your joints, your pointy meshes. After you learn the lighting tool in Poser, learn the smudge tool in PSP or PS or whatever you use to post and convert to jpg. You gotta put your name on it somehow. Do as I say, not as I do, learn to put shadows in where Poser won't. LOL, I hate shadow work. Any post glow effects, you admire in the galleries are easily aquired without expensive filters if you have a program with layers. Duplicate the bottom layer, screen it at 50 % or less, dup again, soft color it at 50% or less. Use Fantastic Machine's Paint engine, free, on one of those layers, you have custom diffuse glow. So, to make your work look like some of the great work in the galleries, learn lighting, then learn judicious postwork. Emily


Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.