Stephen Cooper demonstrates his unorthodox, but no less effective approach to texturing a 3D scene using the Total Textures collection. As opposed to UV mapping the geometry using the standard tools apparent in Maya, he rendered out the scene and then applied the textures in Photoshop using techniques akin to those employed by Matte painters. By using a combination of untextured render passes to generate the lighting he then crops and transforms the textures to “fit” the scene and sets the blending modes in order to preserve the lighting information evident in the 3d renders.
Introduction:
With this piece, I wanted to create a sense of vertigo looking down, but adjusting the focal length on the camera wasn’t enough on its own to achieve what I had in mind. I found a useful tutorial on Highend3d which described how to fake a fisheye lens effect. Basically, you point a camera away from the scene but looking into its reflection on a sphere. The sphere then curves the scene in its reflection – in a similar way to how a fisheye lens works!
Modelling:
This scene was modelled completely in Maya. I used the extrude tool a lot, and the ornamental parts were made using the duplicate move option to create the spirals. I created a curvy shape, and then duplicated it, moved it, then repeated it so that the parts overlapped each other in order to make an ornamental spiral structure.
Lighting:
The lighting for this piece was one directional light. To create the shadow that covers the lower region of the image, I made an alpha texture with a gradient falloff and applied it to a plane. This was a huge poly that sat behind the camera, but in front of the light, in order to create a shadow with a soft edge. The red colouring as it falls off was later tweaked in Photoshop. Luckily the ambient occlusion and final gather created some nice bounce light and shadows which improved the overall ambience.
Rendering:
The scene was rendered with a white shader and Final Gather (Fig01). The Ambient Occlusion (AO) (Fig02) was then made a Multiply layer in Photoshop, ready for the texturing work to begin.
Fig.01
3DTotal
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Fig.02
Texturing:
Using 3DTotal Textures I arranged the layers under the render and AO Multiply layers. Basically, I looked at the area I needed to texture, then I looked through all the textures I had for elements that would fit the space, and then cut the texture out that I wanted to use and pasted it under all of the Multiply layers. I then used the Transform tool to make it fit perfectly to the area I wanted to texture. I could then turn the texture layer into a Multiply, Hard Light, Soft Light or Overlay layer to achieve specific effects. So I was really simply constructing the image as you would texture an actual 3D object within Maya, except I was doing it in Photoshop. So instead of making the textures beforehand, it could be done as necessary in PS. And instead of projecting the UV-mapping for every surface, I was simulating the process in PS where necessary.
This image was created using
a few of the hundreds of textures from the
Total Texture CDs - very comprehensive texture
collections priced with the hobbyist in mind.
To see more examples, download free
samples and read full details follow
this link