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#26
ChickenDownUnder

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tmp7704 wrote...

Ambaryerno wrote...

Slim the inner thigh and calves

I'd leave them the way you had it actually, unless you're trying to make a caricature rather than somewhat realistic human figure. The curves there are due to how the muscles are arranged even on the most toned body, it has very little with being "fat"

some reference:

http://imageandme.co...male_body-1.jpg

overall try to work with drawings and pictures rather than with what people tell you. What you'll hear is likely to be influenced by personal tastes and often enough lack of solid understanding of the subject.


You have to take into consideration what kind of build on a female you are aiming at. Is she white? Asian? Black? No two women are the same, though there are simularities between the types. Taller, leggier white women don't have as much thigh curve as shorter women do like in the example you provided. The muscles tend to be longer and thinner. What inner upper thigh curve (not lower upper thigh, like was originally) they do have is usually hidden under a skirt/shorts, and is a headache to model if you plan on just building armor and clothing onto her anyways.

I was under the impression he was going for tall woman who had small breasts and was more on the athletic side.
http://www.ladyfyre-..._3d_figures.jpg
http://dorkdungeon.c...an_pose_041.jpg

But yes, reference pics are going to win out over any verbal advice anyone can give you, since only you know exactly what kind of build you are looking to recreate.

Modifié par ChickenDownUnder, 24 décembre 2009 - 10:19 .


#27
Ambaryerno

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I downloaded Blender a month or two ago. It doesn't seem to like Windows 7 very much.

#28
tmp7704

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ChickenDownUnder wrote...

I was under the impression he was going for tall woman who had small breasts and was more on the athletic side.
http://www.ladyfyre-..._3d_figures.jpg
http://dorkdungeon.c...an_pose_041.jpg

I'd be tad bit wary with using images of 3d models (or concept drawings like these) as reference because that relies on such models being done correct to begin with Posted Image

Anatomy drawings (like http://www.risingpia...al_anterior.png) can be more helpful here i think, since they can show why the curves form and flow the way they do.

Also, for some really useful images of what real people look like there's http://www.3d.sk/ ... these sets come very handy and cover wide range of types.