Making this thread so I have a place to showcase my new WIP, a fanart model of Link from Breath of the Wild! This isn't just a random project, I have a few intentions and goals with it: - I want to learn Blender. I recently switched from 3dsMax to Blender, and I want to use this project to really get to know Blender, and…
Hey there guys I have browsed these forums a while and wanted to muster up the courage to post some work of my own lol I have worked on this project for myself roughly two weeks now which started of as a doodle to keep myself in practice I started to like the direction I was going with it,. I have got the bare base mesh…
Any constructive criticism welcome, (mainly the anatomy!). I plan to improve the ribcage/oblique area and the musculature on the left (raised) forearm. Once the body is complete I intend to smooth it with claypolish then create the spider symbol. Reference:
So I have finished painting the weights for my foot and now I finished a Sandal for the foot. Thing is I was wondering how I would go about rigging the Sandal onto the rigged foot? I've thought about just going back and rigging the whole thing again with the sandal included. But maybe there is another way? Anybody know?…
Hello everyone! I'm doing a full 3D character for a final project for the university, and I would like to share some of the work in progress. I spend the most part of my time doing environment art, so I'm not used to sculpt anatomy as you will se here... For this project I decided to take for my reference a concept of the…
It looks like you have some nice 3D fundamentals - I think you have what it takes to get into the industry as a character artist. Your best focus right now based on your portfolio is life drawing and studying anatomy - dive into that headfirst. If you don't really draw, then sculpt the human form from photo reference, and…
Like mentioned, studying/observation and practice is the key to improvement (I'll read "AAA" as "high quality"). Also asking for help if you're stuck, so good on you. I think the rough aesthetic is already there, but many elements look like guesswork or a bit random. One thing that stands out immediately is the wobbly…
Try em both. Most people get turned off to animation at the rigging/skinning phase but don't start there. That takes another skill set and if you're an animator the technical side shouldn't be your first concern. Creating realistic believable motion should be your first. Honestly, start with a bouncing ball and the 12…