This might be software or even viewport driver dependent, but at least in 3ds max, you'll always see the distortion of the individual underlying triangles (at least that was always my assumption and how I handled it). The main problem aside from the UV skewing is when the triangulation changes down the line. In this case,…
In blender there is the possibilty to maintain texel density (or texel distribution ?) via special UV unwrapping via "Follow Active Quads" and "SmartUV Project".. so the UV's are spaced accordingly to the different length of the faces like so: So i'm guessing there is something similar in whatever 3D software is used ?? Of…
You're always going to have some distortion when flat things are bent around curves like that, but what it looks like depends on the kind of detail - ie: horizontal lines (relative to your trim sheet) will be mostly ok, vertical lines not so much. I would do a rough version of the trim texture and see how it looks on a…
Is the resolution actually bad? Looks like any of the problem areas are going to be less than 1 pixel in the final image. Also it looks inverted and too deep to accurately match the reference.
it makes it inconvenient but as stated above you'll get a more accurate idea of what the distortion will look like on the final asset. uv interpolation is a dumb linear operation and edge orientation can make a pretty significant difference when a quad deviates from a 1:1 aspect ratio to counter distortion, add geometry.…
Hello ,Kindly i need help with this one I am working an ornamental door as part of my trim sheet exercise " this is my first one " so am figuring out stuff while working , i know i need to have my textures tile from left to right and make the uvs match , so if you take a look at the attached image the upper left corner of…