The first
Posette I?ll consider is a rare bird indeed, the only one of her particular kind so far as I know. Black Canary was a superheroine model made by a fellow called Mr X. She was a unique fusion of the standard P4NW and Evolution Eve, a P4NW variant usually attributed to a modeller called Torino.
In
Poser 4 days, the Eve model was quite popular with the Renderotica crowd. Her primary claim to fame was her exaggerated genitalia (basically a giant gash between her legs), useful (compared to standard
Posette) in making sexually explicit imagery. At the time the Eve geometry was considered the height of ?realism,? though compared to modern genitalia props for
Poser/Daz characters, how anyone ever thought Eve and Eve-alikes looked good aesthetically in the matter of feminine genitalia seems rather silly.
I never cared much for Eve or her subsequent iterations, largely because she was much more time-consuming to pose compared to a standard
Posette; Eve used a different figure/limb architecture much more similar in complexity to modern models like the Michael and Victoria series. As well, most of the conforming clothing items available in those days for
Posette were not conformable to Eve, though in fairness we should note that most Eve users did not consider that a problem, as the types of images Eve was designed to star in usually didn?t make much use of clothing.
Eventually a quality compromise model emerged called P4WWG, which combined the standard upper body of
Posette with the lower body of Eve. The model never really caught on, for various reasons, perhaps the most important of which is that by that point in time most
Posette users had moved on to Victoria, and dedicated quality props for simulating female genitalia were also becoming widely available. Though independently modelled, Black Canary was quite similar to P4WWG. Perhaps if there had never been a Victoria, the underlying base model of Black Canary might have become popular as more practical alternative to the eccentric Eve figure, but as matters turned out Canary?s geometry only ever appeared in this single character release, and she was apparently never heard from again.
I don?t know anything about the character Black Canary depicts, except that she was some sort of comic book heroine. Thus I can?t comment on whether Mr X?s adaptation is visually or aesthetically faithful to any source material.
As a
Posette, Black Canary was an interesting figure for several reasons (though her gaping genitalia is not amongst those in my opinion). There is the technical modelling achievement to consider, as merging two characters (
Posette and Eve) with different poseable geometries is no small matter. She also came with some relatively well-made conforming clothing items and other props, such as a bustier/girdle and a jacket that opens and closes.
In
Poser 4 days, the freebie jacket alone would have made Black Canary a worthwhile download. Though I don?t know who made it, this particular jacket was somewhat popular at the time; for example, it was also used by the ?Cover Girl? GI Joe
Posette. But as far as I know, Mr X?s Black Canary was the only one to thoughtfully include the actual obj file for the jacket, without which the model simply doesn?t work. I?ll add, however, that great care must be taken in initially handling this item. If one didn?t know any better, unzipping Mr X?s Black Canary file into one?s
Poser 4 directory would overwrite the original Female Dress Shirt obj that comes with
Poser 4. In fairness, this kind of careless incompetence was common in
Poser 4 freebies years ago-- as noted, several other
Posette characters of the same time included the jacket, but not its obj, which is an even more ridiculous problem for the end-user. In any case, I had to text edit the Black Canary CR2 before opening it in
Poser for the first time, in order to avoid these issues.
Barring actual interest in the literary character of Black Canary, the usefulness of this model was probably limited for most users to pillaging her props (as noted, the jacket is quite nice). The Eve people in those days were committed to Eve, and given her lower body Eve-style geometry, most of the
Posette people would have been frustrated by Black Canary?s inability (same as Eve) to wear standard P4 clothing items below the waist. If Mr X made Black Canary as an experiment or test of skill that?s fine and lovely, but I doubt the figure?s purpose ranged much beyond that, apart of course from depicting Black Canary herself in Poserspace.
Props aside, the figure has a dizzying number of material zones, and simply overwriting her texture map would probably be much easier than attempting to apply a new (better) one. Unless one had a keen interest in the Black Canary comic character, one would almost certainly want to do that, as the figure has some clothing items simulated through direct painting onto her texture-- examples include her fishnet stockings and choker necklace. In fairness, that was a very common approach in those primitive days, and at the time I suppose Black Canary would have been a superior model for using a texture map at all, as many models of the era used direct object coloring only. Black Canary?s hair is a model called ?New Five? by JeffH, which adds some morphs to the standard
Poser 4 Female Hair 5, and was a somewhat popular hairstyle for
Posette in those days. Today, I think anyone looking to render Black Canary would almost certainly want to replace her hair at once with some more modern transmapped coif.
Black Canary came with an Anton Kisiel texture that was popular in those days, called Paulina, modified for use with Ms Canary?s custom geometry. The unmodified portion of the texture by Kisiel was considered quite good for that era, but the portion modified by Mr X looks rather strange, as the genitalia has a strange and unnatural hue, which seems unfortunate for a model whose primary purpose was probably repeated gynecological inspections by end-users. The model does include a bump map, but its primary purpose is to highlight the mesh stockings painted onto her legs, and does not otherwise accomplish much to enhance the appearance of her skin.
To use the model, Maz?s OBJaction Mover must be utilised to modify the original P4NW obj file. As this process adds the lower geometry, the Evolution Eve figure is not required. In any case and as noted, though Black Canary is similar to Eve below the waist, the two are not identical, so one might say it?s more the ideas and principles of Eve which informed Black Canary?s design, rather than Eve?s actual geometry (at least as far as I could determine).
When considering relics from a far more primitive cg era, we shouldn?t be unrealistically critical by applying modern standards to old models made with different technology. For her own time, Black Canary was a quality
Posette figure, with a notable variety of helpful and user-friendly features that distinguished her from many other freebie characters at the time. In the end, I think she was probably an unnecessary solution in search of an unusual type of end-user, given the stubbornness of the Posette-Eve schism in those days amongst
Poser hobbyists. Today, she remains of interest mostly for her technical innovations, even if her general aesthetics as a
Poser model probably no longer appeal to modern sensibilities.