Thank you so much for these videos! As a college student, these tutorials have been a godsend! You explain everything perfectly and your tutorials have helped me learn more about hand painted textures. I love your videos and I cant wait till you release the premium ones!
ah! thanks guys, thats what i was looking for, the word LOFT. i have googled it and found this great site: http://www.spoono.com/3ds/tutorials/tutorial.php?id=11 made a video tutorial for myself so that i never forget until my hd breaks down. Thanks a shitload guys!
Great job man! Here's a nice little wood tutorial that I think you'd find really helpful: http://www.philipk.net/tutorials/materials/woodrough/woodrough.html I plan on using it for mine too. EDIT: Regarding those bricks, do less variation, That tiling is really evident. You've got a lot of potential!
Don`t worry, there`s tons of tutorials and examples now, not like a couple of years ago. You`ll do great I`m sure :) Maybe this can help a bit: THE COMPREHENSIVE PBR GUIDE from allegorithmic Tutorial: Physically Based Rendering, And You Can Too! Physically Based Rendering for Artists
I'm a bit late to the party, but beside the AO youtube tutorial, are their any plans for future tutorials? I've been playing around with the tool and I know it's capable of doing exactly what I want it to, but I can't quiiite get there. Certain aspects of vPaint are great/intuitive, but others are a little less natural…
I would also take down some of the textures that are tutorials (PhilipK's wood one in particular). Those are pretty noticeable as tutorials. Just do another texture similar. Some of the lighting on your older work isn't really there. You might take those down or rework them. It doesn't match with the newer stuff.
I followed a few different tutorials and tweaked everything to make it work together. I'll be making a video tutorial on how I achieved the water for later on. I'm planning on doing some vertex painting with it as well to achieve some cool effects, so it should be fun to show off when its 100% complete! :)
The unreal engine youtube channel has some good beginning tutorials (and some more advanced ones as well). Also check out the documentation which has a reference for nearly everything in the engine, including explanations for many of the material nodes. Also for materials, many UDK/UE3 material tutorials will still work in…
[ QUOTE ] I can play the levels in the editor and they look stunning. Can't wait to get some content in there. [/ QUOTE ] wait - you can play right in the editor? I can't wait for all the tutorials that come with UT3 LE. but I definitely would like some tutorials before then too, if anyone has any.
Philip Klevestav posted a decent tutorial that might be of interest to you: http://www.philipk.net/tutorials/modular_sets/modular_sets.htm That's more for internals, but a lot of the principles are the same. Stick to a grid, break stuff down as much as makes sense. Don't break it down to such a level that it becomes…