Workshop 5: Character Setup and IK Handles

CHARACTER SETUP AND IK HANDLES

1. This workshop is developed after the on-line tutorials provided by Autodesk. Note that the online tutorials for character setup and IK handles are generally well developed. The relevant links are below.

2. First note that a simpler character with hierarchically linked parts and without a skeleton has been placed in the classes folder in the scene file ergoman.mb. This figure was initially released as a part of a CAD system, re-linked and simplified. This file can be found in the Examples/IK folder on class server:

//aaafileerver/Courses/2023-Spring-ARCH423-523-Mark/Examples/IK/ergoman.mb

3. Load the files Skeletons.mb and SmoothSkin.mb into a working folder on your local hard drive from the classes folder or the equivalently named folder on Collab  :

//aaafileerver/Courses/2022-Spring-ARCH423-523-Mark/Examples/IK/SmoothSkin.mb

Skeltons.mb SmoothSkins.mb

3. From within Maya, open the file Skeltons.mb, and follow the Autodesk tutorial on forward and inverse kinematics. This covers setup of a skeleton and adding inverse kinematics (ik) handles to it.
4. From within Maya, open the file SmoothSkins.mb, and follow the Autodesk Maya tutorial on creating a smooth skin. This covers smooth skinning a surface model to a skeleton and adjusting the influence of individual joints on the model.
5. This interactive web site also contains additional tutorial files for Maya.

6. Maya 2022 has a “QuickRig” tool that expedites rigging characters based on an initial mesh surface such as may be produced with the makehuman open source program. See the related tutorial on character rigging on Autodesk’s Knowledge Base web site

7. Painting Skin Weights

Within the rigging module, create a upper-leg, knee and heel joint.

Create a polygon cylinder coincident with the leg and set the “subdivisions” height to 8.

skin cylinder

Attach the polygon as a skin surface to the leg with the menu item “skin/bind skin”.

bound skin surface

Go into shading mode with the number 5 key.

Select the skin surface.

Select the menu item “skin/paint skin weights” with the check-box also selected.

paint skin weights menu

Select the skin and one of the three joints on the dialog box that follows, and use the paint brush to paint greater or less weight of the joint on the selected areas of the skin surface.

paint skin weights

Note that setting a lower weight decreases the influences of a joint on the area of skin painted. Setting a lower capacity decreases the rate at which the weight is applied. For more details see Autodesk on-line documentation on painting skin weights.