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bodysuit do you do this in another program or in daz how do you edit in notepad like do you change a wording or number or what
I use Zbrush and extrude and Zremesh a masked of section or sections depending on if doing separate boot fitting shape
I fit this suit to one figure with the transfer utility then save it as a support asset like any wardrobe item
then I load that asset on it's own along with the other figure NOT fitting it a d scale and move, resize bones to get as near as the shape as possible
then I export an obj of it and appending it to saved Ztool of the second figure use mostly the move brush and smooth to shape it to fit that figure as closely as possible not changing the topography in anyway
I then export that obj to use in morphloader for the first outfit as well as doing the same for the second figures outfit
when you adjust rigging to figure shape and run erc freeze one used to in properties before saving the morph change it from modifier morph to modifier clone but that is no longer an option which is why I edit the dsf for the morph shape in notepad (you need to save the morph asset uncompressed)
it needs to be modifier clone to trigger the fit to dialogue
Thank you all for your insight
In today 'Elor's asking question' show, I don't get how I'm suppose to use the road here because the arrow on the road seems to contradict the red signs: the signs are forbidding the direction indicated by the arrow
And hum, the bikes' pedals feel a bit too low (but I suppose the bikes are not rigged).
Otherwise, it does look nice and unlike other sets by Xivon, feels like something I could use without being lost for days trying to navigate them.
@elor, treat it as if it is an older street that was recently changed to pedistrian only and the paint hasn't been removed from when it was available for vehicle traffic? Or remove the modern signage, bikes, and other 20th/21st items and use it with horse and buggies?
It is in my cart so I am not sure if the second idea is possible.
It's not unusual for signs to be rotated on their poles to face the wrong direction in the UK. However, I agree the left hand 'No Entry' is wrong and would hide it if I used it.
The electric assist pedal bikes look quite real to me - take a look at the official 'Transport for London' site here: https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/cycling/santander-cycles?gad_source=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIldbI2N2_iAMV6pBQBh3wtg3REAAYASAAEgL1HvD_BwE. The bikes do have seats that can go very low.
The set looks good, generally, and the work it represents is enormous. Only comment I have is over the lack of wind blown litter - though I have avoided London for a few years and it may have been cleaned up a bit.
Regards,
Richard.
I like the street and am gonna get it, but it sure does contain some weird andnot very 'London'-looking buildings on closer inspection. It's like something remembered vaguely or seen only from afar - the overall look and feel is not bad, but the details are rather strange. Anyways, it'll be a fun asset to have for all sorts of scenes!
To me, the value of that street will be in props. Using buildings and other props separately. But yeah, it doesn't feel very London-ish.
Changing the topic a bit, this one: https://www.daz3d.com/dforce-su-stylish-workwear-for-genesis-9-81-and-8-female caused me some confusion, because it's not only similar to this one: https://www.daz3d.com/dforce-su-autumn-day-clothes-for-genesis-9-81-and-8-female which was released earlier, but pretty much has the same style of promo picture. It took me a moment to figure out these were two different outfits and not a re-released outfit.
Haven't checked all clothing pieces, but the shadows on the shorts are baked in, which may not work well with some light settings. If you remove the base map however (left character), it looks almost the same, but with natural shadows. This is on G8F btw, using MMX Genesis 9 Clones autofit plugin.
Yes and no. Parts of it are clearly modeled, more or less faithfully, on actual London buildings and streets.
That black-and-white half-timbered building labeled "Library"? That's the Liberty department store on Great Marlborough Street, and a reasonably accurate representation. The second promo is an abbreviated version of Regent Street just north of Piccadilly Circus. The building by the "Boris bikes" (which aren't quite faithful to the original, and seem to be dockless bikes) reminds me of something too, although I think it's from somewhere further east of Regent Street.
It probably looks odd because the fake "Regent Street" is compressed into a short curve, and there are only five buildings, all of slightly different styles, instead of an extended line of buildings of similar architectural style. But I think everything in the set is inspired by actual buildings, even if they're not modeled exactly.
Yeah, to me the mismatch of buildings is what feels off. I get that not all the buildings would have similar architectual style, but the lineup in this one feels unnatural.
Either way, it's in my cart. With the buildings separate, I can build my own streets as needed anyway :)
cool still beyond me though I do have zbrush too but nervous about using it had it for a few years too - maybe oneday I will
If I may I would like to play devils advocate here. Now I wouldn't know if it was 100% accurate or not, but I think it looks really good useful and you can't beat the $2.99 price plus with the way things are now isn't it better for a product to have the feel of what it represents then to be 100% accurate of a real city street/enviroment or whatever and risking getting the Editorial License which could happen when you look at some of the products that have gotten it. As for different architectual style well I live in Devonport, Tasmania, Australia and our style of buildings is all over the place it's a real mish mash of modern and old and mixtures of jumbled styles that don't really fit together.
lastly just want to say been enjoying the sale with a $2.99 new product everyday some of which offer so much extras to them plus the bonus extra 30% off other products in each days sale including new releases for owning 30+ products created by artists in each days sale
You don't have to for me. As I said, I already had it in my cart (and bought it). I often buy things for parts/props, and I'm not concerned whether it's realistic or not as my renders tend to steer toward fantasy/scifi, and not realistic depiction of anything. That said, I can still agree with those who say it doesn't feel London-ish.
As for different architectual styles: yes, even in Europe (I lived there for over half of my life) there's a mismatch, but it doesn't have a completely random feel. You'll have a street that is mostly in a similar style, because initially, all the buildings would have been built around the same time. Then, some will be renovaned, and some will not, depending on the owners money. Then, some will be altered to accomodate for stores and other business, and some might have been demolished and replaced (but then, often, the requirement of the city's main architect is that the building must at least feel somewhat similar to the surrounding buildings or be modern, but follow certain rules). Think about it as a dinner set: it started as a one uniform piece but then as plates got broken or cutlery got lost, the owner would buy similar things to replace them, to keep the set as close to uniform as possible. In the other example, there was no set to begin with: just someone who bought a plate or a fork as they needed, at random stores and with disregard to any matching and then proclaimed it a set. Maybe not that extreme as the example, but to me, that street falls into the second category, not first, and this makes it feel unreal to me.
This, to reiterate, has nothing to do with the usefulness of the set for me which is high, because I can build my own streets with it if I want to. (Most times, I don't use whole sets anyway, because my poor PC might choke on them.)
Regardless of realism or accuracy, every single Golden Ticket item so far has been more than worth the $2.99. To the point that I actually feel a bit spoiled, and looking forward to the next tickets.
Very well put I think, the set mainly lacks cohesion in a realistic way. In an overall sense as explained above, but also in smaller details. The phone booth, for example, is dirty in the lower parts, but the sidewalk around it isn't. Then why the booth? Because it was just plonked down there without much regard for a truly cohesive street scene. In this set, it's all about just the very general appearance.
Same goes for the architectural details of some of the buildings. They look quite right from afar, but aren't really, if you zoom in on them.
Again, I did buy it, and I think it's still really useful! Just not as a street as it stands.
Is it just me, or does FG Streetwear for Genesis 9 Feminine have the fly backwards? It's not just me, right? It's supposed to come from the other side, at least on womens' pants?
It looks correct to me but maybe one of the promos has been mirrored?
It looks to me like it's designed to be zipped left-handed. Which, my clothes aren't, so I'm confused.
In which direction do you buckle your belts and are your buttons on the left or right of your blouses?
The belt buckle is on the right. I think. I don't actually wear belts.
Buttons I'm honestly not sure. I think they go on the right, but I don't think I have any to check. lol
Okay, buckles are threaded from the right towards the left and buttons are on the left and button holes on the right. Ack, this is confusing The gist of it is that all the overlaps are right side over the left, so if that's what you mean by zipping with your left hand (under the flap rather than through it, the second of which is impossible), then the jeans in that product should be correct. But I think there's at least one promo that has been mirrored, which makes it look incorrect. Unless it's the others that have been mirrored. I don't know. Send help
No, that was my error. They all look correct to me.
OK, all my zippers are all stitched on the left side, with the opening pointing to the right. So you would zip with your right hand. Maybe this is a regional thing? I'm very confused, and I don't think I'm explaining well.
I browsed 'woman jeans' and the majority had the zipper to the left, i.e. you should use your right hand. Which in fact is the same for men.
So at least my search result is opposite of the product.
Many years ago I was looking at a pair of jeans in a second hand shop, but they told me it was women's jeans (I'm am male) because the zipper was left handed. I just checked women's jeans on one of the online stores where I shop, and they all seem to have right hand zippers.
https://www.stylepit.dk/01/damer/jeans?tn3
I imagine that that male/right female/left principle isn't used so much anymore by the manufacturers. Things change, maybe part of the new gender policies?
I get what you're saying. I've been down a massive rabbit hole with this and, like those above this post say, it appears that the distinction has largely fallen out of fashion. I can find plenty of the traditional configuration at more conservative or high-end fashion houses, but that's a tiny, specific slice. But now I'm very confused because I recently bought a belt from Primark (a ubiquitous fast fashion store, if you don't know it), and it's decorated with stencils that mean the belt is worn in the gendered mode, yet all their jeans and belts are worn the other way. I'm also confused by why I thought it was ever the other way here as I'm reading it has always been the same for both genders - for pants - in the UK. Then again, many of the examples I've found of the gendered configuration have been from Scottish fashion houses and I'm Scottish, so maybe we're just backwards. And apparently the US used to be gendered but isn't any longer. I don't know how I feel about this - it's as if a fundamental, universal truth has imploded :D
At least I can rest safe in the knowledge that dilemna has an m in it.
OK, maybe it doesn't matter then. The people making the clothes are as confused as we are.
In the olden days, better women's clothes took into account that often maids would dress ladies of elevated standing, and buttons, etc mirrored those on men's clothes. What these ladies wore became the fashion standard. Times have changed, and now zippers, buttons, etc., are often the same for men and women.
Which of course means that it still matters for 3D clothing that is supposed to represent a specific time.
Maybe they're Prada :D https://www.prada.com/gb/en/womens/ready-to-wear/denim/c/10049EU