@viqhaas Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. Overall it looks like you have a pretty good start with the base mesh and will just need to adjust the support loop routing on attempt 2. The vertical deformation in both attempts is caused by the support loops that run off…
@solitudevibes There's a couple of different ways to approach modeling a lighter hood. A direct approach would be to block out the major forms with a simple quad grid then subdivide to create the necessary support geometry for the holes. @wirrexx explains this modeling process, with a great visual example, in another…
@rudenko_je Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. This thread has a lot of great resources so it's probably worth taking some time to skim through the recent posts and look for examples of how other artists have solved similar problems on other shapes. A couple of posts…
@Neox Really appreciate the kudos. @laeion Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. Soft hard surface objects can be tricky to model but taking apart one of these packages or gathering references of them disassembled can provide some insight into how the paper is cut and…
@macaron10 Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. There's a few different topology layouts that would work for this kind of shape but the answer really depends on how "beautiful and correct" is defined... Quad grid topology can be nice to look at but it isn't always…
@vakdlfjas Welcome to Polycount. Consider checking out the forum information and introduction thread. Placing support loops along the edges that make up the walls of a cylinder will causing pinching. The topology needs to be routed around the existing cylinder geometry so it doesn't interfere with the smoothing behavior at…
@IronLover64 You have the basic idea but the difference is that Wirrexx's cage mesh has support loops. Here's a breakdown of what happens to the shape when subdivision smoothing is applied: The basic shapes look fine on their own but when subdivision is applied the smoothing effect deforms the mesh and the shape melts…