wooden floor texture for 3ds max

wooden floor texture for 3ds max

wooden floor specialists dorset

Wooden Floor Texture For 3ds Max

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




Create your online portofolio Give & receive feedback I agree with the Terms & Conditions. wood texture 3d model Table wood 3d model wood wall 3d model red wood 3d model Wood Chair 3d model Wood Shader_019 3d model Wood Shader_018 3d model Wood Shader_017 3d model Wood Shader_016 3d model Wood Shader_015 3d model Wood Shader_014 3d model Wood Shader_013 3d model 130 free wood 3d models. available in 3DS, BLEND, C4D, DAE, DWG, DXF, FBX, MA, MAX, MB, MTL, OBJ, SKP, SLDPRT, STL, or TGA format. +1407 Royalty-free & commercial license premium Wood 3D Models over at CGStudio. ‘Annie’ Wooden Rocking Chair Low Polygon Snow Cottage Glass and wood table Low Poly Dead Tree Old wooden two-floor house with rooms Bedside Table (4 skins) Wooden Table with Glass PlateAs of September 15, 2016, we no longer publish new courses on this website. We encourage you to begin learning on Pluralsight, where you'll find all new creative courses, skill tests and paths, 1:1 mentoring and more.




Rendering Realistic Interiors in 3ds Max and V-Ray Introduction and project overviewUVW mapping a 3d model can be either very easy or very difficult, depending on the complexity of the 3d model and the final purpose of the computer generated image. If you have basic knowledge of texturing you know that if you have a “box like” model you apply a uvw map modifier with a box gizmo, for a bowling ball a spherical gizmo and so on… But what happens if a client sends you a sample of a wood texture and ask you to apply that on a furniture element? One way to do it is to use tilling, but in order to do it correctly (keep the real dimensions) you need to do quite a few calculations to see how many times that texture should be tiled horizontally and vertically. Fortunately there is another way to do it by using “real world scale” and that is the process I will try to explain in the following tutorial. Download the 3d model Download the wood textures that you will apply on the model




Before you begin, make sure that you have set your units to centimeters (or the units that you usually work with, except “generic units”) As you will see, for this type of approach to uvw mapping, the units are very important. The model that we will be working with, will be mapped with 2 different materials, so the first step is to select the polygons that will have one of the textures assigned to it and set an id like in the pictures bellow. With the selection still active, click on “edit”, “select invert” and you will end up with the other polygons selected; under “set material id”, type “2” in order to assign a new id to the second material. At this moment you have the material ids set, so whenever you need to select the polygons that correspond to a specific material just click on “select id” and type the number that corresponds to the desired material. Open the material editor, and assign a material for each of the polygon selection sets of your model.




Select the material slot of the first material that you want to work with and apply a checker map in the diffuse slot. Under “coordinates” rollout make sure you check “Use Real World Scale” and type in the desired dimensions of your texture (in this case 5cm x 5cm). Now apply a uvw map modifier to the object, select “box” and check “real world map size”. As you can see, every square of the pattern has 2.5 x 2.5 centimeters (the checker map is 2×2 squares with 5x5cm dimensions) At this point, you can replace the checker map (that was just a placeholder to understand better how real world scale uvw works) with a desired wood texture, in this case a red oak. The important thing is to know exactly the size of the photo sample. This one is 35×52 cm, so you just need to type this dimensions in under the “size” parameter of the texture. Click the image to view a higher resolution picture Since we have completed uvw mapping the first material on our model, we can start working on the other one.




In the diffuse channel select the desired texture, check “use real world scale” and type the dimensions like you did for the previous one. As you can see from the photo above, the grain of the texture of the second material is vertical and you probably want it to be horizontal. The first thing that may cross your mind would probably be to change the axis of the uvw gizmo from “z” to “x”. This is only partially correct because even if it places the new texture correctly, it messes up the old one. What you need to do is to collapse the uvw mapping modifier, select the polygons that correspond to the material you need to tweak and with the selection active, add a new uvw mapping modifier. By keeping the selection active, the new uvw mapping material will affect only the selected polygons. Click again on real world map size and change the axis from “z” to “x”. Click the image to view a higher res renderingif you need to add more materials, just repeat the last steps;




collapse the stack, selected again the polygons that you want to correspond to a new material, and add a uvw mapping modifier with the new selection set active. If you have any questions feel free to ask.Toot your horn with V-Ray 3.5 for 3ds Max Ver másOptimización 3D » Archivo » Deformadores Paramétricos para 3DS MaxVer másImprove your renders with reflection mapsVer más60 Fresh 3ds Max TutorialsVer másmao topologia MásVer másHello all, this is my first entry into what will be a series of studies on different materials, including but not limited to metals, plastics, paints, wood, refractive and SSS materials. I will continue to add to each category as I finish more examples. I do not claim that these results are scientifically accurate in look, they are only the result of personal studies and observation done outside of work, to further my own knowledge and skill. It would be great if this could help somebody…Ver más3ds Max Tutorial | Cloth SimulationVer más3DS Max Cloud tests |

Report Page