Substance and Sketchup Workflow
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@krisidious said:
And I have to agree with Roland thoughts on that "Visuals don't matter to ArchViz". I've always considered ArchViz to be rendering and material presentation. And what I do is more documentation of my models for plans... Shame on you JQL!
JQL walks away with his tail between his legs and feeling bad about existing!
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we should run some tests and see what kind of live results we get and results overall.
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@krisidious said:
we should run some tests and see what kind of live results we get and results overall.
As you might know I also had a deep discussion with Manolis from Thea, wich, of course and unfortunatelly, confirmed what Rich and Jason state about unwrapping.
I want to take full advantage of the 30days trial so I didn't download designer yet, I'm going through the tutorials and then I will find some time to work with it.
I see tremendous material design and texturing potential in Substance designer, so I think I will have to conquer my fear of handling Blender...
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And did you not see that model I just showed you that was uv unwrapped and rendered in thea? what's the difference.
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@krisidious said:
And did you not see that model I just showed you that was uv unwrapped and rendered in thea? what's the difference.
There's no difference, I know I can render an unwrapped model in Sketchup, the question is how to easily unwrap it.
I wouldn't know where to start, Rich adviced blender, but with the incredible amount of going back and forth my models have, I'm a bit scared that unwrapping will be a step to create ultimate confusion in my workflow.
There's nothing like trying it and I will, of course, try it. Just holding my breath before I dive in to it...
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But Kris did you model it? How did you unwrap it?
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AC3D easiest unwrapper around. almost completely automatic in some cases it is... in other you may want to edit a bit. But we use maps that other people are going to paint later, so it needs to look a certain way. but if it's just you? easypeasy.
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just part of the uvunwrapped textures on that car. and it rendered very fast. that top texture map is 1000x1000?
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Oh no! Do I have to do all that hand work on separating faces?
I have no time for that!
Imagine I model a pipe like that with some windows around.
I unwrapp it by hand like that...
What happens if the pipe gets stretched?
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You don't map stuff until you're done with an object or you remap it after you modify it. a pipe is not really something that takes any time to unwrap. you just select the faces and hit the button then save the image map. same with a box or any standard shapes. it's cars and what not that get harder.
You can map multiple things to one map or each to their own. but to me, procedural means it doesn't need a map, it maps on the fly as it covers a surface. so as to not repeat an to flow or seem more realistic. it would use an algorithm to show a natural surface.
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I'm not fully grasping, I have to try it!
The only comment I can make is that, of course, I'm not very concerned with cilinders but with the actual stuff I need to create wich is a bit more complex (though not as complex as a car)
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there are two or three plugins for AC3D that make the job a bit easier than that...
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To answer the resolution question, in some cases it is possible to go higher. You definately want to do the bulk of the work at lower resolutions, but a lot of the best features of Substances come through geometry-baked textures as the base... baking those textures can be resource intensive at larger resolutions.
Substances make alot more sense for character and prop models based on subD which have high poly sculpts (ZBrush or similar) to pull geometry-based information from. SketchUp models are usually so basic that the best features of Substances really will be marginalized. And that is before you even have to deal with UV unwrap and seam issues.
Substances are geard toward next gen (sculpt heavy) wokflows being developed by vidogame companies. SubD modeling and great UVs are the basis of how these projects need to be done to see maximum results.
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watch this tut starting at the time set.
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@jason_maranto said:
Substances make alot more sense for character and prop models based on subD which have high poly sculpts (ZBrush or similar) to pull geometry-based information from.
I also understand this quite clearly.
@unknownuser said:
SketchUp models are usually so basic that the best features of Substances really will be marginalized. And that is before you even have to deal with UV unwrap and seam issues.
Simple is good!
So imagine all I want for a given model is to use one of the edge procedurals to create a fake bevel in my arch models.
Would I need to unwrap it to achieve my objective, or would I be able to achieve this without unwrapping?
(I'm sorry for the insistence in unwrap without even trying, but that really is work that I wouldn't want to introduce in my workflow. I'd prefer to have no bevel than to waste half an hour unwrapping a model)
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Edge effects are all controlled by geometry baked textures, so resolution would be an issue for larger models and UVs will become an issue if not properly handled. That is also assuming the SketchUp created geometry is intelligable to SD/SP... which could be the fault of the model creator or SketchUp itself.
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@jason_maranto said:
Edge effects are all controlled by geometry baked textures, so resolution would be an issue for larger models and UVs will become an issue if not properly handled. That is also assuming the SketchUp created geometry is intelligable to SD/SP... which could be the fault of the model creator or SketchUp itself.
Well I really have to try. I know how to texture a model in SU as preciselly as possible and only that unwrapping slips my grasp. My main objective is to keep everything inside sketchup as long as I can and just jump out of it when I really need.
Of course I'm open to a broader frame of mind if that does pay off.
Thanks for all your help Jason.
Let's see where this leads to...
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@krisidious said:
watch this tut starting at the time set.
I don't get it. At a certain stage the guy is trying to make squares fit together quite precisely, then, suddenly he starts dragging and scaling things around in what seamed a random way to me.
In the end the squares didn't fit together, obviously, so why did he do that in the first place?
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