Animate following a path?
Scotty Z
Posts: 44
Ok, so I was able to get some passable results animating vehicle movement with Puppeteer, but I'd like to do something a bit more complex and not as tricky with the timing (i.e. the way it can be tricky with puppeteer to see if you're getting the effect you want while also staying on the dots you made). So, I'm wondering if there's a way to make an object follow a predetermined path using any of the tools available to D/S users?
Any help appreciated. :)
Comments
Nothing huh? Wow, I'd think this a common enough issue that someone would have some kind of input.
I am sorry that nobody has replied to your query. I don't do animations myself, but I have enver seen anything like you are asking about inside DS, it does exist in Poser, and you can draw a path on the ground for the animated figure to follow.
I hope somebody sees this and can give you a better answer.
I don't think a lot of people use D/S for animation. I have Poser 7 (I think...) but I hate it's interface even more than the new D/S mess. I'm starting to feel like if I have to use an unintuitive (to me) interface, I might as well just download Blender and get to learning. My problem is (even though I seem to do nothing but complain lately) I have a perverse sort of loyalty to Daz as it was my introduction to 3D. Oh well, we'll see...
I don't know of a path thing in DS - so could not help you .
what I have done in the past is put some obj ( box or what ever ) in a scene and did the walk by hand using aniMate
walk .
[quote author="bigh" date="1366631008"I don't know of a path thing in DS - so could not help you .
what I have done in the past is put some obj ( box or what ever ) in a scene and did the walk by hand using aniMate
walk .
I don't think that would be of much use with a vehicle. What I've done using Puppeteer is to set points where the vehicle is in different locations and then move between the points, the problem however is timing. If the timing is even off by a small amount the movement looks ridiculous.
Besides being able to move along a per-determined path it would be nice to be able to have the speed "evened out" so that the movement wouldn't appear jerky or uneven.
Another idea I had for turning a vehicle would be to parent the vehicle to a null some distance away (depending on the desired turning radius) and then rotate the null. This should get a nice smooth turn, but there are two problems. 1) a smooth turn isn't always what I have in mind, and transitioning in and out of the curve evenly is problematic.
you could do it the same way - just takes more time - hand work is the best way
if you save the animation as a aniBlock you can play with the timing
there are plug-in you can buy for DS that might help you
you could do it the same way - just takes more time - hand work is the best way
if you save the animation as a aniBlock you can play with the timing
there are plug-in you can buy for DS that might help you
link - on SALE TODAY
http://www.daz3d.com/gofigure