Hey guys,ive got this very specific modelling issue. I guess most of you know Grant Warwick and his shaderball he did for the courses provided. Well ive tried remodelling it and cant get around one detail which is still bugging. Its on the picture in the red circle,its this corner of this edges,i wonder how to get smooth…
Bear with me, i fucked up the shape (no ref used) But. 1. Create the main shapes that define your object 2. Create the part that will be subtracted or added to your primary shapes. For ex. The big cylinder in the middle is to cut a curve into the base big rectangular shape. However the spherical shape (the sphere that is…
There's an easier way to do this. 1. Start low poly eg: 12 sides for main cylinder, 6 sides for small. 2. Do all your modelling on both parts, check smoothing with meshsmooth. 3. Rotate, place all your small cylinders next to the large one. 4. Delete all small cylinders except one. 5. Select the large cylinder and clone…
Spline Controlled Cylindrical Holes This is intended not only to make the high poly look good but to also help ray tracing produce a normal map that picks up as many details as possible. 1. Create a cylinder with 12 sides and delete the end caps. 2. Using angle snaps in front view, rotate until one face is visible directly…
So, I wanted to touch on something Per mentioned a while back, BOOLEANS. I've been using them more and more lately, I was always sort of afraid of using them from early days when I really didn't know how to. But for certain stuff they save so much time. I happened to be modeling a little screwdriver shape so I figured I do…
Manual alignment sucks. Avoid it when you can. Follow the lines and look for intersecting points. People are lazy so the angles of the intersecting lines are probably whole numbers and have some commonality. Start simple and work into the complexity. Avoid over complicating things. Lots of flat surfaces to hide tris and…
Yeah why not? Use a reference cylinder and match it if you want. Whatever gets you there. As for that protective cap, you can totes use a sphere for it, but squash it first as it's not spherical... more like a zeppelin shape. Get good refs, study them and follow them. Nail the large shapes first, then do the details. Make…
I'll be showing the doublesmooth method or whatever you wanna call it. The point is a turbosmooth modifier that respects smoothing groups/hard edges, using it's iterations to control edge smoothness. It has some performance disadvantages, but the main advantage is working with curved surfaces like a cylinder because it…
@sera3D Hey buddy, read my post on this page with the leaves in it. N-gons are not your enemy. N-gons on uniform curved surfaces can be your enemy. On supported flat surfaces, N-gons flat out don't matter, and will enable you to save a bunch of modeling time and render-time by letting you end your supportloops in one e-z…