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    Texturing: still a big black hole.

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    • L Offline
      lecra
      last edited by

      All,

      Many thanks for all your quick answers! Unbelievable that speed!

      I did now all what you said (have a look at the attachment). Doing that with the components it looks a bit unnatural, not? Every slate looks like the other. That could not be.

      But again, do I have really to position the textures again and again? If you take the under slates that are divided by the cubes, I have to paint and reposition every texture. It is not possible to copy the texture from one section to the other?

      palette.png


      Pallet_Texturing.skp

      KR; Lecra

      I'm new to SU but so thirstily to learn all the stuff. Help me fighting against my thirst

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      • TIGT Offline
        TIG Moderator
        last edited by

        A simple oblong slat has full symmetry.
        If you add a full bottom to the slat, then for the same slat-component you can have 3 different versions rotated 180 degrees around the 3 axes; there are also 3 mirrored versions [use Scale -1]. So you have lots of possible orientations of one slat component [6].
        Then if you add slightly different texture positions/rotations/handing etc for each of the six faces, placing differently oriented instances of the one slat-component will give enough visual variation...
        Or if not why not make two 'almost' identical slats and you have double the variation [12] !

        If you have a textured-material perfectly positioned on one face you can 'sample' it using the Material Browser's eyedropper and then paint it onto another face to match, you can always [re]position it a little to make it different from a neighboring piece too...

        🤓

        TIG

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        • Dave RD Offline
          Dave R
          last edited by

          On making the planks look less like each other, TIG has a great suggestion with using both sides of the plank and flipping them end for end. Another thing I find useful is to use images of boards like this:


          http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7163/6680060463_32a27c7e35_z.jpg

          This is 8 or 9 feet long and this allows me to pick different parts of the same board image for either side of the plank. And with Make Unique used on, say, half the planks, I can get a lot more variety.

          Most of the wood grain images I use are between 7 and 12 feet long and typically 6 to 10 inches wide depending upon the speciies.

          Etaoin Shrdlu

          %

          (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

          G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

          M30

          %

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          • L Offline
            lecra
            last edited by

            @ TIG / Dave,

            I don't understand that! If I create a component for the upper plank, copy them 6 times, texturing them as discussed before, positioning the texture it looks equal for all the 6 planks. If I try to reposition the texture of the 3rd or 4th plank, every other plank texture will be also repositioned while this is the same component. So I don't understand your last suggestions!
            Or should I make some of the planks unique in order to change the look?

            Sorry for bothering you, but it seems really that I'm to old for that 😄

            KR; Lecra

            KR; Lecra

            I'm new to SU but so thirstily to learn all the stuff. Help me fighting against my thirst

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            • GaieusG Offline
              Gaieus
              last edited by

              After texturing the planks, you can flip/rotate individual planks either horizontally or vertically so the grain repetition won't be as noticeable as it is now. For some reason, there are white parts in your wood material. Why is that? (This will prevent good texturing all around with the same material wrapped)

              Gai...

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              • Dave RD Offline
                Dave R
                last edited by

                Here's a graphic example of what we are talking about.


                http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7164/6683766669_d6bd161b9a_z.jpg

                In the back left, four plank components with textures. This is similar to what you have.
                Back right, all I did is flip components on their various axes I didn't even rotate any end for end. Remember, Flip is a mirroring operation, not a rotation. I could have randomized the placement of the order of the blanks a bit to help hide the face that it is the same materials on all the planks.

                To illustrate what I was getting at with the long texture image...

                ...in the middle is the pine texture I posted above. It is 8' long.
                At the bottom, I made two planks unique from the other two and moved the texture image to use different parts of it on different boards. There's still some flipping being done.

                Etaoin Shrdlu

                %

                (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                M30

                %

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                • L Offline
                  lecra
                  last edited by

                  Dave,

                  Many thanks for your explanations! I heard the bell ringing now ! 😄

                  I will try your method on the palette as well as on other objects and see how it works!

                  Many thanks for your fast support guy's! Much appreciated.

                  Kind regards, Lecra

                  KR; Lecra

                  I'm new to SU but so thirstily to learn all the stuff. Help me fighting against my thirst

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                  • C Offline
                    Centipede13
                    last edited by

                    @dave r said:

                    On making the planks look less like each other, TIG has a great suggestion with using both sides of the plank and flipping them end for end. Another thing I find useful is to use images of boards like this:


                    http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7163/6680060463_32a27c7e35_z.jpg

                    This is 8 or 9 feet long and this allows me to pick different parts of the same board image for either side of the plank. And with Make Unique used on, say, half the planks, I can get a lot more variety.

                    Most of the wood grain images I use are between 7 and 12 feet long and typically 6 to 10 inches wide depending upon the speciies.

                    How did you make your own texture?

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                    • TIGT Offline
                      TIG Moderator
                      last edited by

                      Get some suitable images [the Internet is downloaded with them!] and edit them as you will.
                      Use these as Textures in new Materials.
                      Save them as new SKM files, for use in any future SKPs...

                      TIG

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                      • Dave RD Offline
                        Dave R
                        last edited by

                        @centipede13 said:

                        How did you make your own texture?

                        What TIG said. Or take photos of real boards.

                        Etaoin Shrdlu

                        %

                        (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                        G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                        M30

                        %

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