Hi, I am starting this forum for a project I am making which I am hoping to get some advice and critique on my work as I am an aspiring environment artist. so for this project, I was looking at making an attic environment which will be loosely based on the uncharted 4 attic environment as you can see from the mood board below. I will be posting some modelling which can be critiqued but for now I'm in the planning stage for this project I would appreciate some advice on anything I might have missed or any suggestions on what I could add to this environment if I don't talk about it in the planning stage or if there is a better way of making something I have planned out please feel free to comment below.For these moodboards, I have collected some images of the attic environments which would like to use for reference images for the modelling stage for this project and I have sourced these images on google and I have also gathered images of other artists work I have been looking at for inspiration.
https://i.imgur.com/E1bSwF1.jpgnow that I have collected some images for the general look of the environment I have also gone on to gathering some more images for the individual assets in the scene and also what sections of the environment will look like the walls of the environment and for the individual assets I am making some artefacts models because this has an archaeological element to this scene I have gathered images fro those models as well as items which might feature in an attic environment owned by an archaeologist like globes, books and painting just to name a few
The amount of references you've collected is insane. I'm not sure why you need 9 references for filing cabinets, but each to their own! Good luck on this project.
AssetList From the research i have collected i have constructed an asset list to keep track of the modelling throughout this project.
Modelling
since my last post, I have done some other research into how this will all come together in terms of modelling , texturing and presenting but I won't be posting this research on here as there is to much and i feel this take away from the models as you will have to scroll down far to see my models so I will just start this post with the block out to show the end result of the research and move straight into the modelling of the environment. now with the modelling, I will be doing the modelling in passes to speed up the production of the project.
now that I have done the block out for the scene I will be starting the low polygon modelling pass in the modelling stage of the environment here are the renders of the models I have modelled so far for my project.
Once the low poly models are finished I will be making the high poly models for these low poly models by using 3ds max for and swift loops to add detail and for the other i will be using ZBrush to sculpt detail for the main high poly models.
now that I have modelled the assets for the scene I have now gone on to texture my models some I'm really proud of but others need some more work done to them but happy none the less with the assets I have produced.
There is obviously a lot of thought and planning that has already gone into this environment and that's a good thing. However, you've chosen a scene that contains a lot of assets, and most of the assets that you've posted need more work on modeling, baking, and texturing.
Before diving headfirst into creating the rest of the scene I would suggest taking a step back. Choose one of the props from your list and take your time making it properly. Make a high poly and a low poly model, bake proper maps, and texture it, posting progress here for feedback at each step of the process. When you have a good looking asset and a solid understanding of the pipeline, repeat the process on the remaining props.
It seems like a lot of work (and it is) but it'll be a lot more rewarding to slowly output quality work while learning proper techniques that will culminate in a better final product. If you put together your scene with the assets as you currently have them you'll spend a lot of time and effort on a scene that won't be very impressive and you'll likely learn bad habits along the way. I know it can be exciting to start a new project and you want to get things finished as quickly as possible and see your scene come together but it's important to understand the asset creation process so you can make things that are done properly and look good.
You have so many wood and metal objects with grain that do not follow their construction. (ladder is prime example). Shows you either didn't bother to learn how to fix, or didn't see as an issue. Any AD worth a damn would conclude you don't have attention for detail, and pass on you. Substance is a tool, and this shouldn't be paint by numbers.....you can layer stuff, you can add detail in zbrush or other sculpting programs, you went the lazy route across the board and it shows. While there is quantity, none of these speak to a high quality bar. I would suggest finding a smaller project, or focusing on bumping the quality bar up on A LOT of these assets. (facets shouldn't be visible on some of these, polycount doesn't need to be that low). Not a dead end, but it's a pretty big reset if you want to hit the quality and craftsmanship of your inspiration.
You have so many wood and metal objects with grain that do not follow their construction. (ladder is prime example). Shows you either didn't bother to learn how to fix, or didn't see as an issue. Any AD worth a damn would conclude you don't have attention for detail, and pass on you. Substance is a tool, and this shouldn't be paint by numbers.....you can layer stuff, you can add detail in zbrush or other sculpting programs, you went the lazy route across the board and it shows. While there is quantity, none of these speak to a high quality bar. I would suggest finding a smaller project, or focusing on bumping the quality bar up on A LOT of these assets. (facets shouldn't be visible on some of these, polycount doesn't need to be that low). Not a dead end, but it's a pretty big reset if you want to hit the quality and craftsmanship of your inspiration.
thanks for the feedback i know it looks like the lazy route and for some of them it is but i plan on improving these assets over the summer ready for when i start applying for jobs. you feedback is appreciated i hope you keep an eye on this thread when i post the improvements on this work.
There is obviously a lot of thought and planning that has already gone into this environment and that's a good thing. However, you've chosen a scene that contains a lot of assets, and most of the assets that you've posted need more work on modeling, baking, and texturing.
Before diving headfirst into creating the rest of the scene I would suggest taking a step back. Choose one of the props from your list and take your time making it properly. Make a high poly and a low poly model, bake proper maps, and texture it, posting progress here for feedback at each step of the process. When you have a good looking asset and a solid understanding of the pipeline, repeat the process on the remaining props.
It seems like a lot of work (and it is) but it'll be a lot more rewarding to slowly output quality work while learning proper techniques that will culminate in a better final product. If you put together your scene with the assets as you currently have them you'll spend a lot of time and effort on a scene that won't be very impressive and you'll likely learn bad habits along the way. I know it can be exciting to start a new project and you want to get things finished as quickly as possible and see your scene come together but it's important to understand the asset creation process so you can make things that are done properly and look good.
Thank you crackrocksteady i really appreciated your feedback and i will be looking at improving this work before i start putting the scene together in UE4 i hope you keep an eye on this thread for when i post improvements you input would be greatly appreciated.
As Pixelpatron said, my biggest critique so far is the wood grain is always going the wrong way on your props. Also, the silhouette of the chair shows that it needs more polys.
Replies
Walls
Lamp
Ropes
Boxes
BoardGames
Chair
Gun
Wires
Maps
Books
Bikes
House Hold Items
Filing Cabinet
Documents
old Furniture
Journals
Artefacts
Chests
Desk
Covered Items
Shelves
Paintings and pictures
Weapons Cases
Wood Beams
LapTop
Work Light
Climbing Gear
Book Shelves
Crates
Globe
From the research i have collected i have constructed an asset list to keep track of the modelling throughout this project.
Modelling
since my last post, I have done some other research into how this will all come together in terms of modelling , texturing and presenting but I won't be posting this research on here as there is to much and i feel this take away from the models as you will have to scroll down far to see my models so I will just start this post with the block out to show the end result of the research and move straight into the modelling of the environment. now with the modelling, I will be doing the modelling in passes to speed up the production of the project.
now that I have done the block out for the scene I will be starting the low polygon modelling pass in the modelling stage of the environment here are the renders of the models I have modelled so far for my project.
Once the low poly models are finished I will be making the high poly models for these low poly models by using 3ds max for and swift loops to add detail and for the other i will be using ZBrush to sculpt detail for the main high poly models.
I think you could keep a better eye on polygon density. Those paper rolls vs. the vases show it best.
Staying tuned
Before diving headfirst into creating the rest of the scene I would suggest taking a step back. Choose one of the props from your list and take your time making it properly. Make a high poly and a low poly model, bake proper maps, and texture it, posting progress here for feedback at each step of the process. When you have a good looking asset and a solid understanding of the pipeline, repeat the process on the remaining props.
It seems like a lot of work (and it is) but it'll be a lot more rewarding to slowly output quality work while learning proper techniques that will culminate in a better final product. If you put together your scene with the assets as you currently have them you'll spend a lot of time and effort on a scene that won't be very impressive and you'll likely learn bad habits along the way. I know it can be exciting to start a new project and you want to get things finished as quickly as possible and see your scene come together but it's important to understand the asset creation process so you can make things that are done properly and look good.
Thanks joe stenning
Thank you crackrocksteady i really appreciated your feedback and i will be looking at improving this work before i start putting the scene together in UE4 i hope you keep an eye on this thread for when i post improvements you input would be greatly appreciated.