Nicholas86 opened this issue on Sep 24, 2004 ยท 22 posts
Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 12:57 PM
Screencapture of the VM
Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 1:02 PM

Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 1:04 PM
Anyone else see anything that is interesting? ;)
Pinklet posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 2:36 PM
The more you guy's show us the more I get sold on getting the upgrade. Funny that when it first got announce, it didn't seem very exciting, but the more I learn, the more I want it.
vinividivinci posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 3:19 PM
Nicholas: Is the convert button in the subdivision menu used to convert to a new mesh with the subdivision smoothing taken into account? The other interesting thing seems that you can select a shading domain directly in the properties tray...hmmm, or was this already available in C3? I don't recall.
Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 5:28 PM
Yes the convert button is used to convert the mesh with the subdivision smoothing taken into account. The domain was there in the properties tray. The nice thing is how domains now show up in the VM! Brian
brainmuffin posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 6:07 PM
what is the "Edit Mode" selection up at the top for?
Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 7:05 PM
Attached Link: http://www.vizualds.com/comment.php?comment.news.99
Check out this link for info on that brainmuffin http://www.vizualds.com/comment.php?comment.news.99 BrianLetterworks posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 7:54 PM

Nicholas86 posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 8:59 PM
I haven't really noticed this. Though I've heard the common reason for this is using the zoom tool I rarely use it in the directors cam. I'll check on it for you though. Brian
Letterworks posted Fri, 24 September 2004 at 9:33 PM

Nicholas86 posted Sat, 25 September 2004 at 12:23 AM
Mike, Can you email me a poser file? Zip it please. I'll test it for you. I have Poser, but I'd like to test one that you know does this. brian@vizualds.com Brian
nomuse posted Sat, 25 September 2004 at 1:59 PM
Hmph. Back when I was trying to use Amorphium for Poser morphs I gave up on trying to keep scale. Most of the time I work at a comfortable scale in Carrara, export, import to Poser at "percent figure size" and tweak it back into position in a wireframe ortho view. I've gotten very fast at this and it doesn't bother me anymore. Of course, if it's something like touching up a UV map or cleaning up one stray vert I'll put up with working at Poser scale.
Letterworks posted Sat, 25 September 2004 at 7:06 PM
Well, the other reason I like to stay in Poser native scale is for morph creation on the clothing object. I find that even the slightest mistake in the program when rescaling the objects (or my own mistakes for that matter) can wreck a morph. It's much easier to stay in Poser native scale, or rather much easier if you can grab the handles. Often I just use Carrara 2 for morphing, but I like the tools in C3 and the ones in C4 look even better, for creating the models. Mike
runejw posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 1:50 AM
Regarding the "Decimate" function in the menu - does it now work better? Found the CS3 functionality of "Decimate" to be quite useless for polygon reduction. Cheers, Rune
Nicholas86 posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 8:05 AM
Send me a complex model you were having trouble with, I'll check it out. It seems to work find for me. Do keep in mind that you get Amapi Designer, which has excellent polygon reductino tools. Email one to me though at brian@vizualds.com and I'll respond back to you. Brian
runejw posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 8:25 AM
No need to get complex :) Just make a primitive sphere - convert to vertex model and try to decimate vertex count by 80%. The result speaks for itself. The functionality I would like, would be to decimate a high-poly model to a low poly model which with subdivision level 3 would approximate the original high-level 3D shape (with some inevitable smoothing of course). But that may be a tall order. Doing decimate by fidelity gives a bit better result, but needs several iterations and then funny yellow polys start appear etc. Cheers, Rune
nomuse posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 10:58 AM
I'd like to go the other way....to tesselate or subdivide with control of the kind of verts created AND the curve of the new surface. As far as I know applying SubD is the only way to create a smoothed surface and you only get the default curve for this. The other tesselate functions stay planar to the original faces.
runejw posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 5:31 PM
Well, the other way around I think C3 also lacks some finesse & tools but that's another topic. Generally I don't think there's an easy way to do this - because it would require the software to read your mind for what you wished. So the practical way is to add contour lines which defines the details you want. Mainly would be pleased if it was possible to easily do the things described in this car modeling tutorial: http://www.cgtalk.com/showthread.php?t=156460&page=1&pp=15 Better control/navigation/editing features in general are needed to make such tasks easier in C3 and even C4 (?) Also integrating the vertex modeling into the normal viewports would be nice. But again that's another topic. A good polygon reduction tool in itself is a premier feature. Cheers, Rune
ShawnDriscoll posted Mon, 27 September 2004 at 8:41 PM
Amapi 7 has the tools needed for that car tutorial.
runejw posted Tue, 28 September 2004 at 2:54 AM
Well, I tried Amapi (v5 I think) but found that it was not my "cup of tea". For sure it has advanced modeling etc, but the interface is something you either enjoy or not. At least that's my impression.
Nicholas86 posted Tue, 28 September 2004 at 2:44 PM
V5 and V7 are like comparing night and day rune.