Tried the variable density tutorial, got a blob falling slowly, long way off this, which is the main reason i bought. Pleeease a tutorial on this with mesh, tex details
you say that all it takes is variable density, but it doesn't work, i;ve tried 1200, 2000, 5000 density for the ink but it just won't dissolve like in this video, and also what texture did you used?
that bubbles tutorial doesn't explain this ink effect, that's a total different setup!
I find myself in a moment in which I have to decide between 2 plugins to buy... and this kind of stuff does make a difference, but I downloaded the demo and have no freaking idea of how to set up densities like you describe. Could you please share the c4d file or maybe give me a further insight of how can I archieve this? Thank you
Hi, it's very easy to set up. In the "fluid" tab of the liquid solver, change the properties type from constant to variable. Then check the option "density" that appears afterward in the same tab.
Now you can let emitters emit a different density. That's all, 2 clicks. There will be a short introduction to variable properties in a tutorial soon.
Activate variable density in the solver. You create a big emitter (water) and then you create another emitter (ink). Create a FSS Particle Group (from within the solvers particles tab). Let the second emitter create the water particles into the particle group and with higher density. The first one into the global group and lower density.
Tried the variable density tutorial, got a blob falling slowly, long way off this, which is the main reason i bought. Pleeease a tutorial on this with mesh, tex details
acocobilly 7 months ago
you say that all it takes is variable density, but it doesn't work, i;ve tried 1200, 2000, 5000 density for the ink but it just won't dissolve like in this video, and also what texture did you used?
that bubbles tutorial doesn't explain this ink effect, that's a total different setup!
rekabalint 8 months ago
This is exactly what ive been looking for in order to buy this plugin, a tutorial would be great and swing it for me,
acocobilly 10 months ago
@acocobilly
You can see a tutorial of the technique here: watch?v=peyGhUa2duM
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago
I find myself in a moment in which I have to decide between 2 plugins to buy... and this kind of stuff does make a difference, but I downloaded the demo and have no freaking idea of how to set up densities like you describe. Could you please share the c4d file or maybe give me a further insight of how can I archieve this? Thank you
MrVideoFX 10 months ago
@MrVideoFX
Hi, it's very easy to set up. In the "fluid" tab of the liquid solver, change the properties type from constant to variable. Then check the option "density" that appears afterward in the same tab.
Now you can let emitters emit a different density. That's all, 2 clicks. There will be a short introduction to variable properties in a tutorial soon.
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago
Very cool
BlueSageDave 10 months ago
@BlueSageDave thx
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago
the movement looks really great, although I'm missing more mixing of the ink with the watertank.
DaFman 10 months ago
@DaFman
thx! :) My references were rather these:
watch?v=Pfs0nxXm-e8
watch?v=VPBdsIWyUZk
It shows hardly any diffusion or mixing so I thought a mesh would be most appropriate to catch this and actually avoid mixing.
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago
really impressive, this is something i've been wanting to explore for some time. Is this possible with the demo of DPIT ?
steadiworkz 10 months ago
@steadiworkz
Sure the demo is fully functional.
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago
@DPITNatureSpirit how the heck do I go about creating Ink though ?
steadiworkz 10 months ago
@steadiworkz
Activate variable density in the solver. You create a big emitter (water) and then you create another emitter (ink). Create a FSS Particle Group (from within the solvers particles tab). Let the second emitter create the water particles into the particle group and with higher density. The first one into the global group and lower density.
DPITNatureSpirit 10 months ago