Adding tan marks to a texture?

Tim NTim N Posts: 193
edited December 1969 in Product Suggestions

I've browsed the store and can't see any skin textures for Genesis that include tan marks.

I'd be keen to purchase such items. Can anyone point me in the right direction?

Thanks,
Tim.

Comments

  • Tim NTim N Posts: 193
    edited December 1969

    Can anyone point me to tutorial that would show me how to add tan marks to an existing skin texture?

    Thanks in advance,
    Tim.

  • pwiecekpwiecek Posts: 1,577
    edited December 1969

    Do you want generic tan lines or do you want to match a specific swim suit.

  • Tim NTim N Posts: 193
    edited December 1969

    Hi,

    Thanks for the fast reply.

    Generic would be fine. If it was possible to much a particular one (say 'Hongyu's Bikini V5') that would be a bonus.

    Cheers,
    Tim.

  • pwiecekpwiecek Posts: 1,577
    edited July 2012

    There are products available at rendo.


    http://www.renderosity.com/mod/bcs/search.php?adv_search=&criteria=tan+&dept;=&type=B


    A trick I use is to find a 2nd skin that is approximately what I want and use it as a guide to create the tan lines in Photoshop or the GIMP.

    Post edited by pwiecek on
  • TimmothTimmoth Posts: 108
    edited December 1969

    Yes, any of the V4 skins can work on Genesis too.

  • Tim NTim N Posts: 193
    edited December 1969

    Wonderful. Thank you so much for the link.

    T.

  • SkirikiSkiriki Posts: 4,975
    edited December 1969

    1. Fire up Photoshop/GIMP/etc -- anything that can handle layers.
    2. Open the default skin you use for your model.
    3. Add a layer, because we don't want to mess with the original layer.
    4. Use magic wand (with sample all layers enabled), click on non-skin area (background white, for example), reverse selection so only skin areas are there.
    5a. Inside that area, paint with a white paint brush the spots that should show paleness; use layer properties to set the layer to "lighten" mode and drop opacity down to 20% or less.
    5b. Alternatively, pour in some brown, set layer to "multiply", drop opacity to 20% or less; use eraser to scrub your desired tan lines.


    6a. No matter what you do -- 5a or 5b -- turn off the background layer with actual skin and save the uppermost layer as transparent .png.
    7a. In DAZ Studio, go to Surfaces tab, pick the bodily diffuse slot, then the pulldown menu in the corner -- open LIE, adjust settings as indicated (image file size), load the skin you're messing with, place this new transparent .png over it, and use the resulting file.


    6b. Or save it as a full skin, and load it to DAZ Studio as diffuse instead of the one you're using now. Remember that if you brown up your characters, you have to retouch the face and other bits too.


    More complicated, sure, but then you know what you're getting.

  • Tim NTim N Posts: 193
    edited December 1969

    Thanks, Skiriki. That's exactly what I needed. It's working well.

    Cheers,
    Tim.

  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 100,926
    edited December 1969

    As well as Lighten you can use Screen - I really wish LIE had Screen mode.

  • SkirikiSkiriki Posts: 4,975
    edited December 1969

    As well as Lighten you can use Screen - I really wish LIE had Screen mode.

    God I'd give someone's left nut for expanded options in LIE.

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