3d noise nodes require position image/AOV baked for any specific 3d model or you can just merge vertical and horizontal gradients into rgb image and input it into those nodes .
The way I'd do it is by using the material workflow. here's a simple example: Substance already comes with a pre-made material node called "fabric009" that you can use with the "material blend" nodes and a few adjustments to make any pattern you want.
if you use default z brush plane primitive and your target texture is 1x2 you can use 2 and -2 in Array for x axis (using append new button) and 2 and -4 for y axis. Also duplicate the original plane before this overlay scale up. You would be able to use it as a crop factor after you "grab" it , and then texture > crop and…
I'm using Refine Noise node from Substance Share to generate fake height from diffuse and then normal map node to generate normals. It's not 100% precise but it's ok.
You get a 45 degree bevel if you use a distance node to convert a shape to height, pipe that into a normal node and use the same value for distance and normal intensity.
A simple example would be to plug a shape into a distance node and that into a normal node If you set the distance to 10 and the normal intensity to 10 you'll get a 45degree angle (at 2048)
I prefer Blender for this. Attach objects together, then create new empty texture and make it active "target" ( its node selected) in all materials ( drag and drop new texture from image pane to shader pane in each material) . Copy UV set and keep the original one with camera mark on while the new selected one with that…
Usually people use distance, bevel or blur nodes and some blobs style noise multiplied on top of it to create some elevated edges around tears but it never looks very realistic really especially on walls. And requires lots of miss and hit . For wall paper tears bending down with air pockets and plaster bumps /wires pocking…
You'll need to add a mentalrayVertexColors node, connecting each object's color set to that*, then the color output goes to a shader or wherever. *Easiest done in the node editor. Documentation page.
(WONDERTOWN by DongLongDong) Saying bye to warm weather with a summer themed project to end off the year :D this one focused a lot on texturing work + playing with material nodes in Unreal until I got something that looked cartoony and bright without sacrificing my normal maps on the van