Collective3d Portrait Vignettes Contemporary 2

Does this image make sense?

Collective3d Portrait Vignettes Contemporary 2

Unless somebody stole all her cloths, no.  What this product needs to be useful is cloths hanging in the closet, along with some empty hangers.  It's fine if the cloths can't actually be worn, you just need the illusion that whomever closet this belongs to has stuff to wear.  That being said, there should be male and females sets.  Unless you can actually use the hangers, they just don't make sense.

Yes, I know it's a freebie, but even freebies need to make sense.

Comments

  • IceCrMnIceCrMn Posts: 2,130

    There are two loose ones laying on the floor that you can pick up and move around.Shouldn't be too much work to load some of your wardrobe into the scene and get a hanger parented to it,or move them around a bit to look as if they are hung from the preloaded set on the bar.The set comes with a loose hanger prop so you can always remove the prearranged hanger set and just place loose ones in there with clothes parented to them to fill up her closet :)

  • JD_MortalJD_Mortal Posts: 760
    edited August 2015

    Another job for the D-Former tool... Great toy to play with...

    1: Load-up a shirt, parent it to and align it to a hanger

    2: Drop-in a deformer tool to the shirt, parented to the shirt

    3: Expand the globe to encapsulate the whole shirt, and squish it as desired for the deformity intensity/strength

    4: Adjust the X-scale of the tool, to flatten the shirt... (Not done yet... Have to remove some "form" from the clothes, too much starch...)

    5: Drop-in more deformers, to deflate the breast-bumps and possibly a formed "gut"...

    6: Drop-in more deformers, to add some natural "drape" adjustments, like the clothing is hanging... (Arms, mid-section along the bottom, neck, some deformed "waves" where clothes bend vertically.)

    7: Save the morph-asset as "Hung shirt (Whatever item you used.) Or, I think you can save the deformers, and possibly it will naturally work for any similar designed shirt too.

    8: Wrap it up, upload it to the store... Get rich! (Individual results may vary.)

    Post edited by JD_Mortal on
  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604

    It's not difficult to do   This image dates form 2009  

  • icecrmn said:

    ...Shouldn't be too much work to load some of your wardrobe into the scene...

    One should not have to "work" at using a prop.  The prop should be doing all the work.  As to parenting cloths to the hanger, the problem there, even if you could do it, is the cloths aren't designed to hang limp, like they'd need to do.  You pretty much have to fake it.

  • JD_Mortal said:

    Another job for the D-Former tool... Great toy to play with...<snip>
     

    Wow, that's a lot to ask from a casual user.  As I mentioned above, you shouldn't have to work at using a prop.

  • Chohole said:

    It's not difficult to do   This image dates form 2009  

    Love the pic.  But at the risk of being difficult, what is difficult is quite reletive.  Again, work the product, not the user.

  • IceCrMnIceCrMn Posts: 2,130

    The prop is the "clay"  you are the artist. Be artistic :)

    it took 16 years to paint the Mona Lisa, a little effort goes a long way

  • mjc1016mjc1016 Posts: 15,001

    Sorry, but most vendors aren't going to spend a lot of time on a product that just won't sell...and a closet full of hanging clothes isn't high on the demand list.

    If you absolutely NEED to use a premade set...and for some reason it is totally impossible to do it any other way...there's a free set of closet stuff here:

    http://inlitestudio.com/3d/product/cupboard-stuff/

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