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    Seamless texture techniques

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    • unclebimU Offline
      unclebim
      last edited by

      I use GIMP and the Low Frequency Even filter (http://registry.gimp.org/node/24636) when needed, followed by the Texturize filter (http://gimp-texturize.sourceforge.net/). Most of the time it gives good results although the texturizer tends to crash at more the 500x500px.

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      • dereiD Offline
        derei
        last edited by

        @unclebim said:

        I use GIMP and the Low Frequency Even filter (http://registry.gimp.org/node/24636) when needed, followed by the Texturize filter (http://gimp-texturize.sourceforge.net/). Most of the time it gives good results although the texturizer tends to crash at more the 500x500px.

        Ahh, this is why I never could use that plugin 😄 ... I tried again and it was a first ! 😄
        -but this means that my image must be less than 250x250 px 😞

        DESIGNER AND ARTIST [DEREI.UK](http://derei.uk/l)

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        • pilouP Offline
          pilou
          last edited by

          @unknownuser said:

          Argh! 😠
          I wrote a whole tutorial and when pressing Submit something went wrong and it didnt get posted. Well well I'll try to rewrite it AGAIN...

          It's always a cool habit in case of post of more 3 lines
          to copy past in the NoteBook before any Submit 😉
          You don't know how many time this little trick can be save!
          It's very usefull too when you write an answer on a Net Mail 😒

          Frenchy Pilou
          Is beautiful that please without concept!
          My Little site :)

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          • EdsonE Offline
            Edson
            last edited by

            @aerilius said:

            I often use the same technique with the brightness correction. I always thought it is a bit unprofessional and Photoshop owners would surely have a real tool for that, but it's great to see that others are doing it the same way.

            I have already tried some texture programs or plugins and wasn't satisfied as they often created just a blurry cross-fading without considering fine details like grooves of a wall.
            Here are two ways how I do it (PaintshopPro tutorial for Edson 😄)

            thanks, aerilius.

            edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre • brasil
            http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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            • HieruH Offline
              Hieru
              last edited by

              Some really great advice and application references on this thread 👍

              The tutorial on brightness level correction was particularly helpful. Does anyone know of a similar method for levelling out the colour in a texture?

              I'm trying to create some carpet textures but I keep getting colour banding resulting from uneven colouring in the image I'm tiling.

              www.davidhier.co.uk

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              • N Offline
                nrevk niatpak
                last edited by

                there's also this method http://loadproject.blogspot.com/search/label/tutorials...
                i sometimes use it in addition to the traditionnal offset thing...
                pix plant is also a good plug
                and there are lots of tips on the cg textures website ( tutorials section )
                have fun

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                • E Offline
                  Ecuadorian
                  last edited by

                  Thanks, Jan! 👍


                  ![Just using GIMP's "Make Seamless" filter](/uploads/imported_attachments/IAhm_JustwithGIMPsSeamlesstexture.jpg "Just using GIMP's "Make Seamless" filter")


                  Following Pixero's tutorial

                  -Miguel Lescano
                  Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                  • D Offline
                    drfabinex
                    last edited by

                    This is a great little free seamless texture maker.

                    Perfect for quick and dirty texture making:

                    Texture Studio
                    http://www.blitzbasic.com/Community/posts.php?topic=46368

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                    • Mike LuceyM Offline
                      Mike Lucey
                      last edited by

                      @pixero said:

                      Argh! 😠
                      I wrote a whole tutorial and when pressing Submit something went wrong and it didnt get posted. Well well I'll try to rewrite it AGAIN...

                      Short Photoshop tutorial:

                      First make sure the image is somewhat evenly lit. Otherwise it will be impossible to make it tileable.
                      If it isnt, do this: Make a duplicate layer of the image and turn down saturation to grayscale and invert it.
                      Increase contrast with Levels if needed. Then gaussian blur the image quite much as we just want to correct over all lighting. Now set that layers blend mode to overlay and turn down opacity until the image looks more evenly lit.
                      What "overlay" does is that it darkens the bright parts and lightens the dark parts so we hopefully ends up with a more evenly lit image.

                      Now make duplicates of both layers and flatten then. This way you have the original layers there for any future editing.
                      With the two layers flattened go to Filters->Other->Offset and set horisontal and vertical offset to half the image width.
                      Make sure you have "wrap around" choosen.
                      Now clone away the edges and use several different clone sources so it's not obvious its a cloned image.
                      For images that need much editing it can be a good idea to have a copy of the un offset image underneath and use a layermask on the top layer to paint away the edges and show the image underneat.

                      A good practice is also to remove any too obvious part of the texture as these things makes tileing more visible.

                      Another good rule is to use textures that are quadratic with sizes such as 256x256, 512x512, 1024x1024 and so on since they use the least amount of memory compared to their size.

                      Hope this helps!

                      Thanks for the tip Jan 👍

                      Support us so we can support you! Upgrade to Premium Membership!

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                      • bagateloB Offline
                        bagatelo
                        last edited by

                        I use a action in photoshop, who quadruply the image.


                        before.jpg


                        after.jpg


                        quadruply.zip

                        While the cat's away, the mice will play

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