Just to demonstrate... I modified FWSA Grace because Fred Winkler/Sabby figures do not work with lower ISO settings on the camera, from what I have seen. You need higher ISO, and very strong light... which my normal render settings are not. And you can't guarantee that other artist work will do well under that setup, so I don't bother to fuck with my film speed or my lighting rigs just to fix their shit.
So, I modify a few things... Translucency color (not brown. Funny how a pale White girl needs dark brown Tranlucency colors), Translucency maps (because darker grey still fucks with your skin color under normal outdoor settings & film speeds), and I also sometimes need to change the Transmitted Color settings (including Transmitted Measurement Distance) under the Volume drop down of Surfaces... that's just how FWSA does their shit.
This works for the main body... but then you have to account for it in the New Gens scripting. You need to see what the output is, and then adjust it.
First image below is the default New Gens for V7 product, which is fine. The script worked, it did its job.
I want pinker lips. I want a rosy anus. Those require more work.
Look at the Translucency maps for the New Gens prop. Really look. They are, by default, in the grey scale... they pick up color from the Translucency setting, not the grey Translucency maps.
Since I lighten the Translucency map to get FWSA figures to work for me, that means I've lightened the colors in the Genitalia surrfaces... the Labia Minora, Anus, Vagina, and so on.
The fix is obvious. I can't re-darken the color for the Translucency map. That would make the entire surface a different shade.
What is necessary? You have to go in and modify the map itself. I added the colors that I wanted to the areas that I wanted... more pink!
After modifications to the Translucency maps, I get the second image below.
Bottom line: If your surfaces aren't doing what you want, you can easily go in and change them.
The New Gens script isn't broken just because you don't get a perfect image. You just need to be able to use GIMP or PhotoShop.
(Is the second image perfect? No. Probably needs more work. I'm just showing what a couple minutes of GIMP work can do.)
Edited by user Thursday, March 16, 2017 7:11:30 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified
cheesymaid attached the following image(s):