Just woke from a very long nap, so I'm back for a little while. Yes, there does seem to be screen shots...it's well done, from the online version, and the links all appear to work offline, which for me is great, since we occasionally experience unstable internet connection. I had to search a long time to find the updated download, since most google searches kept pointing back to older version PDF's, but I wanted something that reflected the UI changes.
The Blender render has a little over an hour to go...it has taken over 10 hours so far, rendering slowly in blocks, similar to Poser superfly. I do like the way it keeps track of the time in the upper left corner above the image. I wanted to know what a detailed scene would take in terms of render time. I know now to use my kitchen hard drive for rendering projects so that my main workstation is not tied up for that long. I did find over on the right hand side panel the option to change the default .png format to .bmp. That's what it will take, my searching around to find a few things, until I'm convinced that the learning curve will not be overwhelming.
I like the fact that Blender plays well with Poser, since I'll always be a Poser user I think, regardless of what the market does. My interest in it was never market driven in the first place, so I don't suspect that will change. And the fact that Blender has such a steep learning curve may be one of the reasons why it never has fallen victim to a flood of quick buck "Barbie doll content advertising"...and that may end up continuing to be its protection. It was refreshing to browse BlendSwap and not encounter a single thing that was "selling" something other than creative models, unlike what I recently experienced on Rendo. To escape the "slut flood" is an added incentive to try to learn Blender...even though learning the interface seems as mentally paralyzing to me now as the Poser interface was over 10 years ago. So I'm trying to look at it that way, and tough out learning the basics.
The render that's in progress,
Birth of Creation, could have a number of artistic themes. For a person of faith, it could illustrate well how man originated first in the thoughts of his creator, and then was finally spoken into being. For the artist, it could be the reaching, the stretching toward a higher expression of creativity. There is another scene on BlendSwap called
Free Your Mesh, with a similar "breaking out of a mold" theme...that could well reflect the theme of the next Poser release. I'll try to get a render of it tomorrow.
I'm keeping all your Blender tips in a folder, Miss B, so that I can keep track of them