Well since nobody commented i'll assume that nobody knows what it is. It's supposed to be the main hall at Edoras from Lord of The Rings. Guess I still have a lot of work to do.
I have no words to describe this ! The simple fact this had been under development for over two years is insane . And I surely feel a Lord Of The Rings feeling on those buildings, awesome !
This is the UV 0 & 1 artifact . You can see that the High res mapped fairly well (for a small texture size mind you) apparent by the light grey ring on the cylinder edges.
British wrestling in the 70s and 80s was much more credible. You never see the mother of one of these WWE wrestlers get into the ring and smack the other one with a brick hidden in her handbag.
That rings a bell, but I can't remember the name. Err... Let me think about that for a while, and I'll get back to you. I've gone one a gadget-diet, you see.
for question 4 if you select the edge and use Edit Mesh > Transform Component, then click on the blue ring it will give you better rotation rotation handles to work with edit - Doh, beaten to it!
Yeah but you can be pretty much guaranteed that in a production environment, there will be people who just don't get it, and will screw the values. It's a decent degree safer to juse use "Metal, or not metal" definitions as that will cover easily 90%+ of your use-cases. The other benefit of metalness workflow for us is…
I like your work a lot, although, some of it could be removed for sure to shine what you can do well. The ray gun is awesome and something I would highly recommend taking to game res :thumbup: I find almost everything about your portfolio comes back to this following question, what do you want to be? Which right now isn't…
I had done a patch for HOps utilizing their asset loader, but we decided it was best to directly include that functionality into DECALmachine. Check out v1.2 if you haven't already, it's all integrated now. Have fun with it. Any question, suggestions > decal@machin3.io Documentation is at decal.machin3.io Thanks for…
I did a ton of it in college. You'll want to build a little press out of a few pieces of plywood and the special screen hinges. it makes doing this stuff by hand much more manageable. the shirts we managed to make were pretty professional and clean because of it. i'm sure some small presses can be found or perhaps those…