Saving Scenes

vindazivindazi Posts: 670
edited December 1969 in Daz Studio Discussion

After I save scenes in Daz 4.6 I can't find them in the content library. What could I be doing wrong?

Comments

  • StratDragonStratDragon Posts: 3,249
    edited December 1969

    vindazi said:
    After I save scenes in Daz 4.6 I can't find them in the content library. What could I be doing wrong?

    go to FILE>SAVE and take a look at the folder your file is being saved in. Daz Studio files will not save to any default folder but once you save one type of file in a specific folder the application tends to remember where you put it last the next time you want to save.

  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 102,291
    edited December 1969

    Where are you placing the files? Are you looking in the actual Content Library pane, or in the Smart Content pane, and where within the pane are you looking? Remember that DAZ Studio native files such as scenes won't show under Poser Formats, and that the Runtime folder and sub-folders will not be accessible under DAZ Studio Formats.

  • vindazivindazi Posts: 670
    edited December 1969

    I did that and can see all of the files I saved but I can't find that folder in my library.

  • vindazivindazi Posts: 670
    edited December 1969

    I am trying to create an old woman using V4. I would like here to have stereo-typical features of old woman hunched back, diminished breast etc. Are there any morph plugins or suggestions for how to create that?

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    edited June 2014

    Nowadays the stereotype older women are more likely to be similar to Dame Judi Dench or Sophia Loren, or even Queen Elzabeth II.

    What you are describing is a stereotypical Pantomime Crone, not an actual person.

    Post edited by Chohole on
  • vindazivindazi Posts: 670
    edited December 1969

    chohole said:
    Nowadays the stereotype older women are more likely to be similar to Dame Judi Dench or Sophia Loren, or even Queen Elzabeth II.

    What you are describing is a stereotypical Pantomime Crone, not an actual person.

    I hope this isn't devolving into a political thing. I don't mean a "Pantomime Crone", or some kind of caricature of a witch, and I take offense at the suggestion.

    I visit older women every week in a long term care facility home who are near and dear former neighbors. I am trying to do an animation pointing to valuing a woman's essence rather than her body. These women are real people on whom gravity has taken it's toll on their bodies but while their value as human beings is still growing. I am looking for a way to accurately represent their deformed bodies as part of making this statement.

    I would appreciate any help.

  • KhoryKhory Posts: 3,854
    edited December 1969

    I've never seen any morphs for a "dowagers hump" but I suspect that you could do a pose that bent the body in a slight curve then add the over arch at the upper back with a D-former. There are some morphs in the morph packs (smaller, gravity etc) that might help or you could try D-former to for that as well.

  • JaderailJaderail Posts: 0
    edited December 1969

    Aged for Genesis includes most of what is needed including the Humps and prominent backbone morphs.

  • KeryaKerya Posts: 10,943
    edited June 2014

    As far as I remember the Creature creator morphs have a hunchback?
    http://www.daz3d.com/victoria-4-2-creature-creator-morphs

    Gravity
    http://www.daz3d.com/ngm-for-v4

    Post edited by Kerya on
  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    edited June 2014

    vindazi said:
    chohole said:
    Nowadays the stereotype older women are more likely to be similar to Dame Judi Dench or Sophia Loren, or even Queen Elzabeth II.

    What you are describing is a stereotypical Pantomime Crone, not an actual person.

    I hope this isn't devolving into a political thing. I don't mean a "Pantomime Crone", or some kind of caricature of a witch, and I take offense at the suggestion.

    I visit older women every week in a long term care facility home who are near and dear former neighbors. I am trying to do an animation pointing to valuing a woman's essence rather than her body. These women are real people on whom gravity has taken it's toll on their bodies but while their value as human beings is still growing. I am looking for a way to accurately represent their deformed bodies as part of making this statement.

    I would appreciate any help.

    Political? . I was just somewhat offended, as someone who can be considered an older woman (Great grandma now), by you using the word Stereotype and the description that followed. :coolsmirk:

    Post edited by Chohole on
  • vindazivindazi Posts: 670
    edited December 1969

    chohole said:
    vindazi said:
    chohole said:
    Nowadays the stereotype older women are more likely to be similar to Dame Judi Dench or Sophia Loren, or even Queen Elzabeth II.

    What you are describing is a stereotypical Pantomime Crone, not an actual person.

    I hope this isn't devolving into a political thing. I don't mean a "Pantomime Crone", or some kind of caricature of a witch, and I take offense at the suggestion.

    I visit older women every week in a long term care facility home who are near and dear former neighbors. I am trying to do an animation pointing to valuing a woman's essence rather than her body. These women are real people on whom gravity has taken it's toll on their bodies but while their value as human beings is still growing. I am looking for a way to accurately represent their deformed bodies as part of making this statement.

    I would appreciate any help.

    Political? . I was just somewhat offended, as someone who can be considered an older woman (Great grandma now), by you using the word Stereotype and the description that followed. :coolsmirk:

    I didn't mean it personally to anyone. Sorry for the offense.

    What i was trying to say with the word stereotype was that, while I recognize all not older women suffer from osteoporosis and other ailments that life brings, I was looking to create images that reflect these deformities for the reasons I explained above. People are more than their bodies.

    I think the "Aged for Genesis" content will fit the bill. Thanks everyone.

  • vindazivindazi Posts: 670
    edited December 1969

    Does any one know if Liquid Pack is animatable? Examples of what can be done with it?

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