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Hi Andy,
Nice test, and nice test scene/environment.
The slight crinkly motion reminds me of clay-mation or stop-mo. It has a real
quality to it, kinda like a perfect mix between frame-to-frame hand animation
and simulation.
By crinkly motion, i mean the sudden changes from frame to frame in the form of
the creases. It looks just like aliasing in time - is that what it is?
It's good to see how well the cloth behaves when colliding with dynamic shapes.
do more tests!!
benp
Andy Cocker wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This is the result of my first Clothray experiment. Unfortunately, I haven't
> yet managed to work out the effect that each variable has on the cloth's
> behaviour, so this is more the result of trial and error than planned
> outcome. I hope you like it anyway.
>
> --
> Andy Cocker
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> listen to my music at:
> www.mp3.com/lunarland
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> 'I spilled spot remover on my dog. He's gone now. '
> 'I went to a restaurant that serves "breakfast at any time."
> So I ordered french toast during the Renaissance. '
>
> - Steven Wright.
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Name: Cloth_A.mpg
> Cloth_A.mpg Type: QuickTimePlayer File (video/mpeg)
> Encoding: x-uuencode
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