Hey man. Yea I've tried. My orbital region is not very pronounced though in comparison to some people with very pronounced bonestructures. Like for example this area I've always had a hard time with, where the oribital merges with the bone structure of the nose...
Hi! In both ndo2 and the suite version of ndo there is normal zipping which work in a similar way by merging a normal element non-destructivly in to one single layer, but without the performance and disk size issues of smart objects. is that what you´re looking for?
The high poly model looks muddy and unfinished. You should really spend some time to polish it to get it really nice. It looks like you tried going for a merge between a messy bronze cast sculpture and a PS1 era 3d model.
Not much to crit on this one; I'd say go with the tattoos since it's more eye catching than arm wraps and makes the concept stand out. Also the ears merge with her head too smoothly, but if you're covering them with hair that won't matter.
I haven't touched the head (yet) btw, do you guys have a trick for merging the head with the body without having to put 20M polys in the whole model just to make the skin pores on the face ? if you know what I mean
I would agree with the statement that if possible, it would be great for you to post practical examples of these problematic cases. It would benefit everyone, and could even lead to new creative solutions - much more so than merely discussing the theory behind it all :)
No bump in visual fidelity whatsoever?... Watch it again. It might not be a full generation ahead but it's still fairly obvious to me. Vid has me super stoked, Gears gone LOTR scale!? I think it's safe to assume this footage is merely an appetite whetter.
I really like the airships and the last environment with the shaggy houses. The trees on the cliffs could use some more alpha love, and the water could maybe use some particle or alpha'd planes on the merging between the waterfall and the below water Good stuff!
I merely thought he sounded robotic...not that he was indeed Dr. Spaitso (my mistake for not being clearer). I thought it would be apparent that the guy's raw talent probably wasn't in public speaking...which I think makes the commercial humorous.
rick - wouldn't it be farcical if it turned out the writer of the first article you linked had merely pulled the economy stats from different US and european sources and forgotten that the US gallon is smaller than the european one. Oh yes that would be ridiculous