![]() ![]() Select the basic dress template used for your Booth item. You can either import a blank image or erase it with the eraser tool in VRoid's texture editor, but if you do it that way, be thorough. We only need the mesh so it'll widen the shirt. If the lower hem of the shirt is clipping, that's because The shirt's lower hem isn't expanding like it would when worn over a skirt. You don't have to be super neat about it just erase the dress parts you don't want that are clipping. If the “dress” sleeves clipped, then I'm guessing it's all on one layer, and you're going to need to erase the parts you don't need. What clipped? I haven't opened the file (I'm on mobile), so even though I recognize it uses the basic dress mesh, I don't know whether the skirt is on a different layer from the sleeves and such. You mentioned clipping, which suggests to me that you used one of the above two methods to make it wearable. Getting it to be wearable is one thing, but getting it to look good is another. This will merge the template with the garment and allow multiple types of clothing that would otherwise be forbidden. There are two ways to work around conflicting items, particularly dresses since they supercede tops and bottoms:Ĭreate a Top or a Bottom custom item (in this case a Bottom since it's supposed to be a skirt), which will allow a shirt to be worn with it, orĬlick Edit Texture and add a new template. It would be helpful if you posted an image of the combination that clips. What on earth am I doing wrong? Did I get tricked by some outdated assets from a time when overlaying these things was possible? Am I missing a layering function somewhere where I have to spread out the textures across different templates? Any help would be appreciated. Importing the PNGs onto a skirt base also doesn't help, as it just overlays the skirt underneath the shirt, making it clip. It still only lets me have one or the other. Yes, I have tried saving the vroid files as that custom item file and importing it, to literally no avail. ![]() vroid files, not the custom item files the program primarily uses. As a result, Vroid seemingly won't let me overlay this "dress" with the top I also got. One of the items is a skirt, but for some reason the creators used a dress as the base. If you want to make your own polka dot Turner Dress, I put together some kits so you can do just that! Check them out here – you can get one with or without the pattern.I'm feeling a bit stupid, as I bought some clothes off of Booth and I can't for the life of me figure out how to apply them. What I love most about this dress is it looks really fancy… but it’s incredibly comfortable! I’ve decided it’s my Christmas Day dress – it’ll look great, but plenty of stretchy room for turkey seconds. Next time, I’ll use some rip-away tissue paper on the sleeve and machine-sew them, I think. I tried a couple of different hemming approaches – in the end, I machine zig-zagged the skirt hem, and hand-sewed the sleeve hems. Then, I cut the sleeves from the mesh, and for the skirt, simply cut one skirt in black jersey, one in mesh, basted them together at the waist, and then constructed as usual. The Turner Dress really lends itself to having an overlay: the bodice is lined, so simply use the black jersey for the inner bodice and mesh for the outer bodice. However, I recently realised that the stretch polka dot mesh I bought last year would make an amazing overlay Turner Dress… and so it did! Love the idea, don’t like the sitting-down-in-them bit. Partly because they’re typically woven – and I typically don’t wear many woven dresses. I’ve been a fan of dresses with sheer overlays for ages, but never quite managed to make one for myself. THIS IS SO ME! (And if it’s so you, too, you can buy your own kit to make the dress here!) You know how sometimes you try on a garment, and you think oh this is just so me? ![]()
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