
- #Poser debut digital how to#
- #Poser debut digital movie#
- #Poser debut digital full#
- #Poser debut digital professional#
#Poser debut digital full#
You get enough of the characters and props to create animated scenes but get so much more with the full program. Like the other programs, Poser Debut is a stripped down version of their Poser program. As you get better you can even create your own objects. Poser allows you to take and animate prebuilt 3D models. While I was looking at Smith Micro’s website, I stumbled across Poser Debut. Great programs but not what I was looking for.
#Poser debut digital professional#
Smith Micro has taken their professional graphics programs, stripped out some of the more powerful aspects and provided amateurs like myself with more than enough capability to do a complete project and decide if we want to go farther. I first tried Smith Micro’s Anime Debut and their Manga Debut. By the time I finished I had over 12 hours invested in a single picture that you can barely make out the details.Įnter Poser Debut. I finally decided modifying some clip art was the best choice. This really came to a head when I was trying to find a picture for the Surviving an Engineering Presentation post. I struggled to come up with a good picture for my Too Good for Your Career post and still feel that the graphic I used was weak at best. It was obvious what pictures to use in my greenhouse post. I’m trying to convey my message in a cute graphic that, hopefully, ties to my message and inspires you to read the rest of the post. I’m not an artist, I’m an engineerĪdmitting this handicap, it’s not a surprise I struggle for hours when I create the graphics for a post.
#Poser debut digital how to#
It’s not that I felt the intense detail was necessary, I just could not see how to convey the idea of a belt buckle without going into the details of the buckle (the dime is for scale). I spent a lot of time with a single hair brush trying to paint in detail. I had a huge collection of paints and some very small brushes. When I was younger I used to paint miniature lead figures. To me this is an amazing feat of communication. A small black blob in a tree, a curved V in the sky or actual detail as the observer might perceive it. An artist will look at a scene, assess how much of the bird is actually visible and draw just enough to give the impression of a bird. I break the feathers and eyes down to the individual elements and start thinking about how to represent these elements. If I want to represent a bird in a picture I immediately think of feathers, beak, eyes and wings. As a engineer I’ve always been impressed by an artist’s ability to convey a message using a minimum of information. To further celebrate the scene that’s documented, Oscilloscope is pairing the theatrical debut with a mini-music festival called Poserfest at A&R Bar and The Basement the weekend after the film premiere.I think Smith Micro has a real hit with Poser Debut.
#Poser debut digital movie#
It’s the kind of movie I would have watched from my small town and said, I must go there. This, combined with some deeply creative location work, makes the "Poser" version of Columbus feel, well, cool. The look of the film is also gorgeous, both slick and authentic with great work by cinematographer Logan Floyd. Mix is particularly revelatory and has a promising future as an actor, and Bobbi Kitten has already landed another feature, showing an adept pivot to acting from talents that were already known to those who’ve seen DTWS. Of course, the lack of professional acting credits doesn’t mean a lack of talent. Yet they use this mostly unprofessional cast to create something that feels organic, with shades of Richard Linklater’s 1990 ode to his Austin home, “Slacker.” I can say I was trying to take off my “local” cap, but when you’re seeing friends and acquaintances on the screen, it’s hard not to turn into the Leo DiCaprio pointing meme. Segev and Dixon set the film in a world they knew and included a ton of local musicians and artists. Bobbi embodies the confidence that Lennon lacks, and it becomes a relationship that takes an obsessive turn. She’s faking it until she makes it.īut things change for Lennon when she meets Bobbi Kitten (a fictionalized version of the Damn the Witch Siren frontwoman, played by herself). Lennon seems shy, an outsider who wishes she was an insider, and the recordings have a certain voyeurism to them. Just on the outskirts of this scene is Lennon Gates (Sylvie Mix), a thoughtful and introspective podcaster who ingrains herself into said scene through recording sounds on her phone. “Poser” is set in a Columbus underground art and house show scene that feels more big-city hip than Midwestern, a kind of hyper-realized version of the Columbus scene.
