Thread:Lamartian/@comment-26048032-20150310024225/@comment-10291972-20150310182613

Thanks for the interest, Volknur. Just so that we're on the same page, you should know that I currently only own Dark Souls, and not Dark Souls II. While I'm sure that many DS2 pages need work, obviously all I can do is work on DS1 for the time being. I'm sure not going to tell you not to get cracking on DS2 armor pieces if that what you want to do, but as I can only work on DS1 armor pieces, that doesn't lift any of the work off me, lol.

Also, just so we're absolutely on the same page on what I intend to do (I have been told by a few people that I was not very clear about it), basically I'd make a new character with the default bodytype, hack in all the armors, strip the character down to his undies and capture images of each individual armor piece, for the benefit of the Fashion Souls people. Each image would be taken in the same area so as to avoid lighting inconsistency, and would be in a well-lit area. I think that you understood this already, but it never hurts to clarify.

Now, as you might imagine, with the large amount of armors in the game, times four pieces and two genders each, this is quite a job. This leaves me with four options: The most economical choices would be option 2 or 4, omitting female versions except where necessary, but I'm not sure what sort of demand there would be from Fashion Soulers. My policy is when there's doubt about something like that, just be complete and do it all, and thus my preferred option would be 3.
 * 1) Capture images of every armor piece for both genders
 * 2) Capture images of all the male versions of armor pieces, only capturing female versions when there is a noticeable difference between the two
 * 3) Capture images of only male versions of armor pieces while someone else captures images of the female versions (under the same conditions, of course)
 * 4) Capture half of the male versions of armor pieces while someone else captures the other half, and like the second option, only capture images of female armor pieces when there is a noticeable difference

If you (or anyone else) would be willing to assist in this endeavor, I would be grateful.