zukeprime opened this issue on Nov 30, 2002 ยท 11 posts
zukeprime posted Sat, 30 November 2002 at 3:09 PM
Anthony Appleyard posted Sun, 01 December 2002 at 1:50 PM
2) Can I get the shin to do the same thing? No. Each side of the shins part of the skirt would have to be a shin. And that would run into the same problem as with cross-welding the fingers in e.g. a dragon wing. And you would have to text-edit extra weld commands into the dress's .CR2 file. And that would %$&#;@&* the rendering because of some funny bug (at least in Poser 4).
ToolmakerSteve posted Sun, 01 December 2002 at 7:02 PM
Attached Link: http://poserpros.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=6502
I wasn't aware of a good way to do long dresses. Started looking at different people's clothing to see what they did. I found that Anton's Egyptian Long Skirt did succeed in conforming to both thigh AND SHIN motions, even though it is just a hip geometry. See attached URL at PoserPros.zukeprime posted Sun, 01 December 2002 at 9:17 PM
BTW...I didn't cut thigh pieces out of the hip yet. Just imported the Anton dress into Rhino and "stole" his lshin/rshin handles. It works pretty good actually...that is, until she sits down! :)
Do you think I should cut out the thigh parts and use those as well, or is this merely a JP issue right now.
I can manipulate a CR2 fairly well, but I truly don't have a good understanding of it all. Just cut and paste until something works. :(
EnglishBob posted Mon, 02 December 2002 at 7:12 AM
Sitting down is another can of worms altogether - you just found that out, I think. :-) Steve Shanks has used an interesting technique on a couple of PoserWorld long dresses, though I haven't got around to trying it myself. The skirt is split into hip, rThigh and rShin - no left hand parts at all. This is fine for a tight skirt - she sits down, the skirt conforms to her right leg, and you just need to tweak the dress and/or her left leg until it all fits. If you wanted a stretch fabric effect, then some morphs would be needed.
zukeprime posted Mon, 02 December 2002 at 7:14 AM
hmmmm...interesting. I'm a member of PoserWorld, luckily...so I'll take a look at what he's done. Do you know which dresses use this technique?
EnglishBob posted Mon, 02 December 2002 at 7:40 AM
There ya go then, sorted... :-) For Vicki, the "Evening Tight Gown" has a combined leg version as well as a conventionally cut form; for Posette, there's the "Sari Separate Skirt". Looking forward to see what you come up with, since I'm experimenting in this area myself.
Anthony Appleyard posted Mon, 02 December 2002 at 10:44 AM
What is needed is to get rid of that stupid bug in rendering that makes pulled-toffee effects when rendering a character with extra Weld commands edited in. I suspect that the Weld command is expected to also calculate information needed by other processes, and thus omitted or extra Welds throw things out of gear.
ToolmakerSteve posted Sat, 07 December 2002 at 11:37 PM
ToolmakerSteve posted Sat, 07 December 2002 at 11:45 PM
...and see the PoserPros thread I mentioned above. I added references to various other relevant threads. And Jim Burton gives his opinion (as one of those who has been through this battle many times) that there won't be a totally satisfactory solution given the current Poser code. Maybe Poser6 ;)
zukeprime posted Sun, 08 December 2002 at 8:09 AM
Thanks Toolmaker. I've been following the threads at PoserPros as well, trying to make head or tails of this situation. Yeah, although Anton's system gave me some hope, I pretty much scrapped the idea when I couldn't get it to work. Right now, I'm back to using ISOP's MLDress CR2. It has EMC lines that allow you to adjust the bottom of the dress (lFlare, rFlare.) My problem now is trying to get the joint zones setup right so the bending occurs naturally. Since this is supposed to be a tight dress, I may try Jim Burton's method of just creating a lThigh, lShin and seeing if that does any better. Perhaps I can even try to set up some lines that will allow for some leg spread movement via EMC.