TL;DR Version: This is the latest screengrab of my scene: So recently I got the idea to model a hovercraft. I've decided to model one of the mid-size AP1-88 passenger craft that ply the Solent between Southsea and Ryde in southern England, I don't have any concept, so here is a reference photo: And here is a video of one…
Looks good. I dont know if you are using ZB's seethrough slider. I found it really handy to have the film of the character close by on a second monitor, and slide the film under ZB to check different angles. For this kind of stuff I dont use ortho, but maybe that is just a personal pref.
Can someone tell me the simplest and fastest way to replicate this technique used by Arimus 3d with 3ds max ! Ive tried with a custom (aligned) pivot, with normal direction scale tool etc to flatten scale both faces and edges but the selection doesnt stay in place and I have to manual tweak it in place. it shows in both…
I've been using the Polish slider under the Deformation tab The circle / asterisk to the right of the slider toggles whether the effect has hard edges, or smooth edges. For this I've been running it on the smooth setting (asterisk) first to get rid of any remaining segments on rounded parts, and then the hard setting…
Made top of slide darker, colored the hammer and grip, added details to the receiver/trigger guard. (side note- is it possible to edit the color of the trigger?)
for obstacle 2: This isn't a "bad" animation really, but it's really lacking a lot of important life and proper physics. When you imagine the character doing things like leaping over that pit and sliding down the other side, is that how you see it in your head? There's so much room to make it less robotic. When I think…
When I look at most tutorials on texturing, the focus is mostly on technical things like unwrapping UVs, creating brush presets etc. There seems to be very little attention give to actually exploring how color and light interact and are communicated through texturing. Are there any resources that deal with this subject…
It depends on how you're using it. It's a little bit like getting a pair of glasses for the first time. You know how the first time you get them, it can give you headaches off and on because your eyes aren't used to adjusting to that focus? It's pretty much the same thing, your eyes aren't used to focusing in this sort of…
Just updated, also here is the reference for the side I am showing (cept no titanium slide on mine): http://www.gun-world.net/german/walther/p99/titanium.jpg