  | | | Cloth | Cloth 2005-04-02 - By john clark
Back Hi all
I've never used any cloth simulation stuff but yesterday I watched 'The making of the incredibles' and noticed that they used Maya's cloth for the clothes which surprised me 'cos I'd always assumed that it was incredibly slow, but it got me wondering about making clothes. All entirely academic since I work in games with Maya, and cloth simulations are not very real-time! But I wondered what syflex was like and whether you could make shirts and jackets with it easily. Has anyone used it for that sort of stuff? What's it like?
cheers
John <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML><HEAD> <META http-equiv=Content-Type content="text/html; charset=iso-8859 (See http://iso-8859.ora-code.com)-1"> <META content="MSHTML 6.00.2800.1491" name=GENERATOR> <STYLE></STYLE> </HEAD> <BODY bgColor=#ffffff> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>Hi all</FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT> </DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>I've never used any cloth simulation stuff but yesterday I watched 'The making of the incredibles' and noticed that they used Maya's cloth for the clothes which surprised me 'cos I'd always assumed that it was incredibly slow, but it got me wondering about making clothes. All entirely academic since I work in games with Maya, and cloth simulations are not very real-time! But I wondered what syflex was like and whether you could make shirts and jackets with it easily. Has anyone used it for that sort of stuff? What's it like?</FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT> </DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>cheers</FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2></FONT> </DIV> <DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>John</FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>
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