Dear pros, especially sculptors, please help. I'm obsessing over this and can't stop. So I have this anime figure head I'm recreating (Super Sonico). What makes it different from lots of others is that the front bang/hair is smooth until gets cut into nice sharp edges. As if one continuous mesh. As as you can see from the…
@count23 When the number of segments in a cylinder is the limiting factor, one option for capping it with a quad sphere is to create a cube then use loop cut to match the number of segments and To Sphere to generate the shape. Scale the new quad sphere to fit then delete any sections that aren't needed or don't line up…
@anotherdoseofcorey Translating approximate 2D shapes to a reasonably accurate 3D volume can be challenging so it's best practice to start off by blocking out the basic shapes to figure out how it all fits together. Below are three possible options for creating the recessed area around the small cylinder. The first example…
@juanoblagu Those decimations look perfectly fine. @ArsenyZvonar First off, nice post! the amount of energy and time you put into this makes me want to give you my time and energy. When you cut holes in curved surfaces, you should match the cutting geometry to the surrounding mesh so that the quads can flow nicely. These…
@guitarguy00 You can alter the geometry, but it's a bit involved. So you make your Sphere/Geosphere demonchild, and that's when you notice it: The pinch. You try to mitigate it by chamfering that edge, but you have little control before the pinch gets even worse. Time to evaluate what the problem is. These edges come from…
The first attempt is smoothing badly because your edges don't flow along with the shapes of the knife. Your second attempt is better, but you're overcomplicating things by adding way too many loops in order to define the curve of the blade. When you add two edges so close together like you did on the side there, you're…
Hello, welcome to the awesome world of Subdivision Hard Surface modeling :) Starting out nowadays the amount of available online resource can be a confusing grind to sift through so to make the process a tad easier, here's some pointers I've managed too pickup along the way. So regardless of complexity beginning with as…
@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…
@dan001 In most cases there's room for improvement but broad or open ended questions rarely lead to specific, actionable feedback. What's best will often vary depending on the desired outcome and constraints of a specific use case. Getting good answers comes down to figuring out exactly what you're looking to improve and…
@pr3stl1 @ned_poreyra As Eric and Axel have mentioned, the issues with both models can be solved by using the same topology strategy: Block out the shapes so the segment counts match and use the existing geometry of the primary shapes as support with the secondary shapes intersecting between the edge loops of the primary…