Hi Guys, I have bigg problem wit 3do,in update 1.5: This image has been resized. Click this bar to view the full image. The original image is sized 1024x544. When i made project with ddo with someone model, i see this guggy shere.. I reinstal PC and problem persisted. I have never this probl
Not much to crit on the artwork, it looks great. But please use JPG. 8MB or so per image is really excessive, especially for those viewing on mobile. Better to keep each image under 1MB. JPG at level 7 or 8 is great image quality.
I think you have made it much more focused since the first time I saw the site. The mercenary image is in dire need of attention; the image is sooo grainy on my screen. Go back and make a higher-res image to replace it.
Going to have to agree with what others have said about this one. Looks like a good one for modularity. Statue looks fun too. This image has been resized. Click this bar to view the full image. The original image is sized 2400x1216.
In your last image, the hair is more or less one big shell with some spiky bits, but there aren't any layers. Go back to the original reference image you posted, draw what you think the wireframe looks like on top of that image.
I was going to frontpage this thread, but the images are too large. :( First image in your latest post is 6035 x 2870 pixels, 7.5mb! Then a 6mb, and a couple 5mb images. If you used 1920x1080 you would get more decent file sizes.
I'm uploading the images from my computer, not from a URL. I followed the instructions laid out in the FAQ...upload the images, click the arrow next to the "attach" icon, select "insert all". Instead of embedded images, i get whacky links...?
The images are too small to really enjoy them. It's like trying to view a masterpiece from 40 feet away. Thumbnails are fine, but I'd like to see a larger image to see your detail and all of the painstaking hours of work you put into these images.
I have another method that should work just as well. I think this is how Epic did it. * Go through the photogrammetry as usual. Make sure that you capture an hdr chrome ball of the environment, or do a full 360 hdr capture of the environment and throw the images into a photo stitching program to get an environment map. The…