Hello! the gladiator dude is finally done. Here are some renders! Enjoyed a lot working on him. I imagine him being some kind of slave. Quiet, towering, and very dangerous. In his collar it says 'Damnatvs anima' which means 'Cursed soul' in latin (Or so was the intention 😂)
All the sculpt work Is complete, and now I am trying to get some good renders. I don't have a specific method just trying a lot of things in zbrush and photoshop to get decent result. The render are low res atm. I saw a tutorial on how to get high res renders so will be doing that this weekend
Also made an attempt to pose the sculpt but not entirely happy with it. Posing is more challenging than I expected, might do it properly when I create the low poly version of this.
And I'm calling this one done and dusted! Since the previous post, I've added various sign post assets throughout the environment, added dirt/moss/leaf decals and fog throughout the streets, added some fencing around the loading area, worked on the lighting for the interior of the fishmongers, updated textures/materials for the brick walls, bunting and benches and played around with post-processing a ton.
I've created some video flythroughs, prop shots and material breakdowns for an ArtStation post. Looking forward to the next project!
Long time lurker..like really long..I just love this thread to bits! so I have a little model I made for fun..Its a WIP 620tris right now..and the texture is 256x256
Hi, here is some more recent work that I did for Pavlov VR. It went live earlier this year. I was responsible for multiplayer level design and environment art. Not sure if it qualifies for being part of my sketch book, but I guess that's a technicality...
Hello everyone! I've finished my Japanese Street environment rendered in Unity HDRP. It's modular and I made nearly everything from scratch. I used metal, wood, and plastic trim sheets along with tiling textures and edge decals. The texel density is 2048px/3m. Side note: I'm not sure what the Japanese means in this scene, so don't read it meaningfully.