@Suosa It looks like you're on the right track. If the mesh subdivides cleanly, without any major smoothing artifacts, then it's generally acceptable to use n-gons and triangles in hard surface subdivision models. Since this model is going through a sculpting pass it may make more sense to try and add these minor surface…
@amoeba You're definitely on the right track. What you have right now looks fine on a flat surface and the basic edge flow is there. Most of these window louvers snap into place on the surround trim or are glued directly onto the glass and body work with adhesive or double sided tape. Some people like them and some people…
@CodeferBlue In general: flat surfaces are largely uneffected by messy topology so the accuracy, consistency and flow of the topology around the curved shapes and shape transitions is arguably the most important. An overly rigid grid topology can interrupt the edge flow around the circular features so it's best to have a…
@Elarionus A lot will depend on the available tool-set / plugins, preferred modeling operations and number of steps desired. Here's a few strategies for developing this shape with different tools. May need to mix and match to find something that fits your package and workflow. Definitely not the only way to do it so any…
@lammer_228 Overall it looks like you have the right idea. Whether or not the shape is correct depends on what the model will be used for (hero prop, background prop, minor environment clutter, etc.) and whether or not the model needs to closely match the reference images. A lot depends on where the object will appear in…
@martianlion Modeling the complex shapes of cabinet inlays flat then deforming them into shape can be a good option. A lot depends on what the final model will be used for and how accurate the details need to be. A couple of other options would be to use floating geometry or to create a clean high poly of the basic shape…
Hey friendo. You're gonna learn some math here, sorry. I see you didn't get the help needed, so here's a lesson in patterns. Identify the largest repeatable pattern. In this case, i'm able to pizza this boi into 6 pieces. The base angle for this pattern found by 360°/6=60° Now to break down one of these 60° slices. I do…
@FrankPolygon Hey Frank, thanks for the extensive answer. I'm pretty new to modelling and I have to admit that after reading the answer 5 times or so, I still don't quite understand everything. :) While I have managed to reconstruct something that leads to similar results, it feels like a trial-and-error approach to get…
Hey Frank, thanks for the extensive answer. I'm pretty new to modelling and I have to admit that after reading the answer 5 times or so, I still don't quite understand everything. :) While I have managed to reconstruct something that leads to similar results, it feels like a trial-and-error approach to get there. I have…
It's a destructive process so there are two concerns: preserving shape accuracy and avoiding manual work. Manual work is slow and the results are often inaccurate. Tools (used correctly) will be faster and more accurate than pushing points around manually. There's a couple ways to quickly re-build the shape without doing a…