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Posted on Mar 13, 2019, 9:32 pm
#11

I wouldn't go past 5 cm in your femur, your torso looks pretty short after that point.

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Posted on Mar 14, 2019, 2:06 am
#12

Are you sure? I mean on mock-up pictures the leg thickness is the same of original short-legs. How do the legs look like post-surgery when they are trained, do they get thicker?

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Posted on Mar 15, 2019, 11:57 pm
#13

How these mock up LL proportions pics are made.I want to check mine.

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Posted on Mar 18, 2019, 10:08 am
#14

Quote from: StrangeDays67 on March 13, 2019, 09:32:36 PMI wouldn't go past 5 cm in your femur, your torso looks pretty short after that point.

so lengthening the tibias doesnt make torso look short? is there a relation.

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Posted on Mar 18, 2019, 2:22 pm
#15

No, I just think your femurs should be lengthened instead of your tibias because it looks better.

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Posted on Mar 19, 2019, 7:56 am
#16

Quote from: StrangeDays67 on March 18, 2019, 02:22:48 PMNo, I just think your femurs should be lengthened instead of your tibias because it looks better.

i think the opposite. a higher knee joint looks better p.s getting longer tibias gets the body more streamlined thus appearing taller than actually is.

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Posted on Mar 19, 2019, 4:19 pm
#17

At the end of the day it depends on your X-rays. You would lengthen according to the ratio of femur to tibia, you can't judge it with just the eye alone.

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