This one here is an assignment for my texturing class, no stock images or pictures, we had to model a door and paint it with Photoshop. I used After Effects to create the fire and added it as a decal. Realtime snapshot.
Hi @gfelton, thank you for the comment. I've added burned areas around capsule with help of decals and it indeed make scene more clear that the capsule actually fell from sky and crashed into this ravine.
Since your used to UDK I guess your familiar with tiling textures? Id go that way judging from the info you provided. Break the tiling up with vegetation and decals. Good luck!
@ZacD: Thank you very much! You helped me a lot, it looks much better now! @urgaffel: Kind words man. I'm working on my house decals and details right now.
Yed I am currently using albedo ,metalness, gloss, normalmap, and ambiant occlusion maps for all my meshes except the spray paint that I am using for the decals that I Have on the wall.
looks really spot on. You should put this in UDK and put Sobel Edge Post Process ! I'd ad more grunge in the edges in the body. How about decals like stickers and spray paints ?
Out of curiousity, are you tiling the base texture and using decals to add elements like the painted symbols, random dirt smudges and exposed brick? Or are they just large individual texture sheets for each wall?
Hey all, Im Zach and I am currently a student at LCAD working on a project. At this point I am currently finalizing my block out for this asset. I would love any feedback on better ways to tackle certain parts or a cleaner way to accomplish something. I am also working on a trim sheet to add decals further down the road.…
Thanks and noted on the roundness of the cushion, and regarding the walls I was trying to keep it fairly simple, but yes I should have added decals to have some detail and randomness in the background and not look so uniform.
Update: Slowly adding more props to the interior. Going to add some more lockers out in the hallway before I start digging into micro props and decals like writing on the chalkboard, paper, etc.