Sometimes you try all your might to grab the Bezier handle of a keyframe but can only get the translation arrows. Clic anywhere beside the point, the handles are still there but the translation arrows are out of the way. Do your thing…

Cool things no one knows about EIAS
Hi, gentlemen
Last 2 days we’ve been busy with learning how EI scales a plug-in with chidren. Finally it’s clear , so let us story what we’ve learned, and, of course, sorry if we “rediscovered a bicyrcle”
At least it’s a new for us.
Ok, steps:
- create a simplest cube with Ubershape (resolution = 1)
- add MrBlobby to prj, set “vertex blobs” and link the Cube to it
Now you see 8 balls (for each cube’s corner). Let’s start experiments with “Inherit scale” = OFF for children.
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save MrBlobby as a model, re-import it and try to scale. All goes fine, scale works in absolute standard and intuitive way. BTW: same results are with “Live plug-in” = OFF
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try same scales with MrBlobby plug-in (Group Window). Ops! Absolute different results! We see our balls are enlarged/reduced correspondly, but distances between them remain the same.
We’ve learned how it works. If plug-in’s scale = 2 (for example), then EI passes to the plug-in the children data scaled to 0.5 (and vice versa, children are enlarged twice if scale = 0.5). A plug-in reads children and creates a geometry. EI scales the plug-in’s output. Final result: previously reduced/enlarged source data take their original places (cube’s corners in our test), but plug-ins results are scaled (balls)
Hmmm… interesting solution, but … suitable not for all plug-ins :hmm:
Ok, now set “Inherit scale” = ON for child groups. For our example it works as a “standard” scale. But it’s not so if a plug-in has 2 or more chidren, cause each child uses its local center to scale.
There are a lot of scales in EI 
You can preview motion blur and DoF within Animator, no need to do a test render!
- Select the world view window
- Render > Preview Blur Window
Just make sure you have multi-frame set to more then one frame and that your preview is set to output to screen (thats the default anyway).

Ian
This tip was given on the Postforum by Charles Berg (Cj)
It shows how you can reposition groups by dragging over the icon or make it a child by dragging over the title. Easier to show:
http://www.rdn.qc.ca/EIAS/Project_window_order.mov
The project window has far more ways to be organised then some people realise. Have a look at the little icons at the top of the project window. Specially the first and the fifth give you a lot of options. Too many to sum up here, just explore them.
One of my favourites is to colour label the elements in a complex rig that will animate and switch to “view by label”. That way you don’t see the parts of the rig that you don’t animate and everything appears in a listed way which takes up much less screen space.
grrr…need to figure out why this doesn’t work in OpenGL. And perhaps add full-window cross-hairs.
I love this one, the most useful to me has to be ‘complexity’ which lists objects in order of polygon count. I use it often.
Here’s another one.
You can render your animations backwards if need be, we’ve had to do this a few times but I keep forgetting it’s even an option, hopefully this will immortalise it in my mind 
In the render window > click timing > render: range of frames (drop down) > hit reverse.
!!
Ian
Next up
You can colour cameras, I usually colour them so they match their colour label in the project window.
In general I use three labels for cameras: Possible viewpoints, Confirmed viewpoints, Render cameras (render cameras being free roaming cameras for diagnostic purposes viz. not animated or in a viewpoint position).
Take a look at the attachments,
Ian
Good Tips Ian-
I always color code things with a red label that I want turned OFF at rendertime.
Use the “select by- label” option from the select menu, choosing the red color and click the visibility check on any group with a red label and ALL red labeled groups will be turned off.
I make a habit of checking this just before hitting “Go”.
I also often use the light blue label for glass objects to help control them in a similar way.
Should we open a new thread with workflow tips like these? (or maybe we have too many thread titles?)
I sure would like to learn about other people’s process and how they set up projects.
This is one of those features that when you get into a habit of using helps you to make texture previews fast. We all know how time consuming getting that texture to look just the way we want it to well here’s how I hurry things up.
Under the “Snapshot” camera icon at the bottom of the “Camera View” window there is the option to define an area with a marquee that only renders the defined part of the “Camera View”. Used in conjunction with reduced or no antialiasing and low sampling levels for lights etc you can get previews to turn around realy quick.
Buggsy
This tip was given by halfworld on how to get brighter highlights:
“If you’re highlights arn’t bright enough remember you can just add the Anisotropic shader, turn off the patterns and turn on the phong/blinn specular. You can set the brightness above 1 here whereas you can’t in the specular tab.”
Nice tip Ian.
When working on very large projects there can be a noticeable time delay (with the spinning beachball making frequent appearances) as the project ‘refreshes’ after every mouse movement or click, as you work. This repeated delay can become quite intrusive even when simply selecting items in the project window, particularly when making multiple selections using the shift-click technique.
My suggestion is to make multiple selections in the project window by holding shift down and then repeatedly click-dragging a marquee over the item/items you want to select them (even if they are single seperated items). This selection behaviour seems to supress the software’s ‘refresh’ action until you release the shift button indicating the selection process is finished. This makes working on large projects a lot quicker.
Cheers
Gyro
Some quick navigation hints for the orthographic viewports.
Click on the Magnifying glass icon and the view zooms out in discrete increments. Shift+Click on the Magnifying glass icon and the view zooms in.
Alt(or Opt)+Click on the Magnifying glass icon and the view zooms (In or Out) to encompase all items in the scene. Move the cursor over the viewport window and hold down the ‘F’ key. The cursor changes to a Magnifying glass. Click in the window and the view zooms to encompase all items in the scene. (Sort of a duplicate of the Alt click function).
Hold down the Alt key and the cursor changes to a Hand with Index finger extended. Click and drag a Marquee and the view zooms in to that specific area.
Select any item, hold down the ‘C’ key, and click in the viewport window. The view shifts to Center the selected item in the view. Hold down the ‘C’ key with Nothing selected and click in the viewport window. The view is Centered without zooming.
Hi All.
I have done a few tests with small render files that took about 60 seconds to render straight out of EI. The scene has a simple sphere with raytraced sub surface scattering, 2 lights, global raytraced reflections and GI, rendered at half Hi def size (960 x 540). The machine configuration is Mac OS 10.4.10, 2 x 3Ghz Dual core Intel, 4GB RAM.
I found that with the local and 3 slaves (2 intances of rama on the main hard disk and 2 instances on an external drive) 4 frames rendered simultaneously in 60 Seconds, effectivly quartering the render times! So it seems that the dual processors and dual cores are all being utilised in this situation.
I have also loaded 4 instances of renderama slave onto an identical mac on the network and found that both machines running 8 frames of the animation completed all in 60 seconds.
This may be trivial to some but it is a great time saver for us, so hopefully it is useful to someone else and hopefully I have put it into terms that others can understand, like me!
Ash
Someone may have posted this before, but you can use the crumple shader along with bones to create some liquid. What is nice about using bones is that you have total control over the movement of the liquid. I used it to do mixed slurry in a cattle feeder and it worked very well. I used 5 bones that were perpendicular to the water surface. Check it out at:
From the manual: (EIAS Animator does not support the anaglyph (red/blue) stereo effect, just right eye/left eye stereo.). But it does support it with just a tiny bit of post. For stills: copy the red channel from the R image and paste (replace) the red channel in the L image. For animation, use AE and the Set Channels Effect to use the L image as a source for the R image red channel. You’ll need a pair of those funky red-blue glasses to see the effect!

I am working on a project which suppose to show animated objects growth in different axis.
(Example: A pipe grows and turns along the pre-defined path)
Is there any plug-in available to do this task???
Plz help me to find out solution.
(Note: In After Effects I imitated pipe growth… however this idea did not work when the whole scene is moved.)
Take a look at Swage, http://www.paralumino.com/
I am not sure if they are still selling it. They have several sample movies that do what you are talking about.
SH
