
When I try to bake the normal map, I get artifacts caused by a mismatch between the high-poly and low-poly models. Because the meshes diverge, the angles smooth out worse than they could.
Even though this only shows up on glossy surfaces, which I’m not planning to use, I’d still like to understand what approaches exist for solving this kind of problem and how closer mesh correspondence can be achieved. I don’t want to go with an “eh, good enough” approach, even if nobody but me will ever notice.
I found an example of what I’m aiming for: https://sketchfab.com/3d-models/curvedelements-nm-test-f2bdc226edf441609a67d82fb1a8e6c6
But I can’t get any further than LP 01 RESD. I don’t understand what repurposed normals and matching curvature mean. Any result starting from 02 would be fine for me, but ideally I’d want something like LP 02 REMC RPNM. Or am I doing something fundamentally wrong? (The tutorials I watched did not cover cases like this.)
P.S. I hope mentioning Substance Painter doesn’t make this post off-topic. I’d rather not cross-post if I can get answers here.
Replies
https://polycount.com/discussion/81154/understanding-averaged-normals-and-ray-projection-who-put-waviness-in-my-normal-map/p1
I think you're ending up in this situation because you're starting with some arbitrary cylinder size, and an edge width plucked from the ether.
Why is your cylinder 60cm in diameter? Why is it 20 sided? Why are the edges so sharp on such a large object?
If you have answers to these questions before bake time, you won't end up in this situation.
Model a lip-balm instead. Or a knife. Follow refs. Start with what you want to make and how big it should be. Then place it on your screen so it takes up as many pixels as you want it to. Then choose how many segments you want for the look/feel/job the model has to do.
Then choose how wide you need those edges so they'll be captured by the lowpoly properly.
This is a balancing act, something you need to practice.
As for how to REMC:
Take your highpoly, delete the CatmullandorClark, chamfer the edge a bunch.
Now your highpoly and lowpoly are the same, except for that edge.
If you didn't use support loops, use support loops. Or weigh the normals so they point straight out the cylinder like flag poles.
Bake
You can call me a perfectionist (and that would be true) but if there is a correct way to do something (even one I may not know yet) and a “good enough” way, I will always choose the first, even if the second is faster and cheaper.
Sorry if I caused any unnecessary fuss, but this is my first prop and it should be the best. I’ll use this as my starting point.