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Hi Knut Thank you - that is an excellent tutorial! >8o) I have a few additional tips to share, as I also often make use of animated textures / billboards. #1 - It is possible to import compressed AVIs into Vue - just not 'all' of them. It depends on the Codec. I have successfully used DivX encoded files (in .avi and .divx formats). I agree that Full Frames Uncompressed is often the easiest to work with though, even if the files are huge - your final animation can always be compressed. #2 - If you edit the animated texture, I disable Receive Shadows, and set Luminous to 100% for textures such as TV/Monitor screens for a brighter/crisper look. #3 - It is possible to edit the properties of the Animated Texture, and you may find that optionally enabling BiCubic texture smoothing and Frame Interpolation will improve the animation quality, but at the cost of a little more render time per frame. Thanks again Knut - I really like your animations! Kind regards |
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Hi Roderick Glad you liked it. I have posted the animation at the end of the tutorial for you to see. I have tried DivX, Xvid and you name it without sucsess, but I need the uncompressed files for keying purposes. The problem is jagged edges if the file is not good enough. Can I publish your reply on my website? I would like to have some comments on the tutorial. Knut |
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Hi Knut Of course you are very welcome to post any feedback/suggestions - it's all for sharing and the benefit of the community! >8o) I have just finished my own short project that uses Animated Textures, and where I have used these suggestions: Corncopia3D Animation Gallery: Cornucopia 3D Link Movie Shortcut: Murder Must Advertise Movie URL (9Mb) I think this area has a lot of untapped potential, but I think you are one of the few people who I have seen make best use of it so far! >8o) Kind regards |
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FuzzyVizion Joined: 16 Mar 2006 Posts: 63 Last Post: 15 Jun 06 [profile] |
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