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| Virtual Pose 3: The Ultimate Visual Reference Series for Drawing the Human Figure | 
enlarge | Author: Mario Henri Chakkour Publisher: Hand Books Press Category: Book
List Price: $34.99 Buy New: $23.09 You Save: $11.90 (34%)
Buy New/Used from $21.00
Avg. Customer Rating:   (33 reviews) Sales Rank: 251467
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 80 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 10.2 x 10.2 x 0.5
ISBN: 0971401047 Dewey Decimal Number: 702 EAN: 9780971401044 ASIN: 0971401047
Publication Date: March 29, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The next best thing to working with a live model, Virtual Pose[registered] 3 provides professional and student artists with an accurate and convenient method of viewing the human form - without needing access to a live model and studio sessions. Digital artist Mario Henri Chakkour has created a CD-ROM and companion book that features models in 70 high resolution poses, images which can be zoomed in on and rotated 360 degrees. Painters, sculptors and other artists will welcome the opportunity to study at length each detail and subtlety of the human form, giving them a deeper understanding of shape, form, and gesture.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 28 more reviews...
  If having issues opening cd got answer Mario was nice enough to email me a solution! How often will the author actually help u! November 15, 2008 I don't have access to any models, I really love this pose book & CD. CD: can rotate the models in 360 degrees, stop and print the picture you want. But then, I upgraded to windows vista, which in turn I had to update my ITUNES. BIG NIGHTMARE!! Opening it w/Itunes I could not rotate the models, I could no longer use Quicktime something to do w/windows vista and the nightmare that goes w/it. Contacted VIRTUAL POSE through their site listed right on the CD. I don't know if Mario Henri Chakkour the author wrote to me by email, but each email had his signature. He promptly and expeditiously emailed me. He just didn't say It's a windows vista thing, sorry there's nothing we can do about it. No, he found a way to resolve the issue. He is very, pleasant and I cannot believe he took the time to resolve and email me with the solution. Here is the site to be able to fix your problem w/Itunes and Quicktime. Once you download it, you have to go through the program and open pose, and it works way way better.
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I hope this resolves your issues. Once again, I'm so happy I purchased this product and would not hesitate to purchase any of Mario's books. Can't beat an author actually writing you back and helping you resolve the issue!
  too many light sources September 28, 2008 There are way too many light sources at the same intensity. The fill completely obfuscates the forms -- sure, nice picture, but for any student of anatomy or the body, fill in this case, is useless. Sure, if one just wants to make a 'still life' from these pics, then ok, lighting is adequate. But if one desires to really study the figure via surface and anatomy, well, one is better off hiring a model, and referring to a good anatomy book.
The quicktime angles help and offer better understanding, so the product by-design is helpful. The photography simply misses completely. Hint to producers: Pay attention to lighting, and decrement fill to key way more. The fill is counterproductive, as in a lot of cases, it obfuscates form -- for those who are in this to study the human form, rather than simply produce replicas of an image.
My summary: The ability to rotate a pose makes this product incredibly valuable. It would have been more valuable if the photography had a bit more respect with regard to the communication of form, as we really have to rely on rotation rather than the communicative potential of lighting. That was an opportunity squandered -- to produce a stellar product, given the price point.
  Solid visual reference September 13, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Chakkour offers a valuable resource. Many aspiring artists (maybe I'm not an artist, but I aspire) have limited contact with models, but understand how important it is to have ready access to simple and precise figure imagery. References like VP3 are a godsend for us. They inspire us with the many possibilities that inhere in the human form, and provide exact reference for our imperfect efforts.
This collection works very well in one way. Each model poses on a turntable; while holding that pose, s/he is photographed from many angles. With just a little interpolation, one can interpolate any angle in between, laterally, even if it doesn't cover the up/down axis.
But, as with any book, it contains the author's vision - not mine. Perhaps your vision can adapt to the pose, perhaps your pose can adapt to the vision. Some poses simply baffle. I expect a pose book to try to cover many of the moods a body can express, and p.41 worked well for a recent project, but not all that well. The pose on p.40 simply baffles me, though. This is a pose book. The authors imagined some situation in which that pose could make sense, so the student could take the body's physical facts and build a story around them. So, just what story did the pose on p.40 inspire? I'm lost.
Also, I had trouble with the retouched photos. A few times, a model and angle would combine to expose something indelicate, like an excretory orifice. Fat-fingered blurring saved us from many of those troubling details. C'MON GUYS. I don't have any special fascination with naughty bits - but they're there. I find the Barbie doll plastering-over of normal anatomy jarring and disturbing. That little touch doesn't affect the pose or the general flow of a body. It does affect my ability to accept the image as real, though. It's not that I actually want all those little details of the human condition. Instead, it conjures horrible surgery when I see them missing.
On the positive side, these 70 poses gain value from their multiple viewing angles. On the negative, the editors bowdlerize even nude figures. And, on top of it all, the pose that I really wanted never appeared. I tried to adapt one from the book - it came pretty close, actually. Just not close enough.
-- wiredweird
  does the job, but background is horrible August 11, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The 360 degree rotating is great, some poses could be more interesting, some are too similar to each other. The women modeling are pretty much the same, same bone structure, similar weight, skin color, ethnicity and age. There is only one young male model, and one older male model. That part was really disappointing. And what it bother me the most was the background color. in all the pictures is the same, white!. A darker color, gray or black on any other color for that matter would be great! the fact that all the models are REALLY white becomes obnoxious. At certain points the background blends with their sking color, making it hard to differentiate one from the other. With a different background the model would "pop-out", and the artist's eyes would easily focus on his/her subject.
  really good, but not perfect April 12, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
i really love using this book (and the CD). i want to mention that i have a Mac with an operating system that isn't updated (OS 10.2), and i purposely got Virtual Pose 3 because i assumed (rightly) that a more recent version of these books would come with a CD-ROM that's not compatible with my operating system. so thankfully i CAN use this CD, which is the best part of this book.
in my opinion, the book itself would be improved by 3 things:
1. more dramatic lighting (although i believe the author has addressed his reasoning for this)
2. a spiral binding (easier use for drawing from the book itself)
3. larger pictures (at least some)
i do like the models in this book very much, and the poses are great. i'm a bit of a beginner, and i only get to go to a life drawing once a month or so, so this is a great resource for me to just do lots and lots of gesture drawing, along with some more detailed work.
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