![]() ![]() Everything is ultimately unfoldable into a flat rectangle. The best way to think of sculpties is like origami. Sculpted primitives (sculpties) are oddities unique to SL, and can only be created under a very stringent set of restrictions. They happen to have the word "sculpt" in common in their names, but that's generally as far as the similarity goes. A regular contributor to 3D World, he edited the magazine for a period of two years.Sculpted primitives in SL are not the same thing as the kinds of arbitrarily sculpted 3D models commonly produced in Sculptris, Zbrush, Mudbox, etc. Steve Jarratt has been into CG for many years. ![]() Sadly, it seems that Sculptris is no longer being developed and Tomas Petterson has left Pixologic, so grab the app while it's still around. ![]() Sculptris connects with ZBrush via the GoZ bridge, and is great for those starting out. Again, the only issue is that the resulting mesh is dense and composed only of triangles, which is fine for static objects but will need retopologising if it's to be animated or used in a low-poly environment. This small app was a hobby coding project developed by Tomas Petterson, but proved so impressive that it was picked up by Pixologic in 2010, with Tomas joining the programming team.īy using triangular polygons and 'Dynamic Tesselation', it allows users to quickly draw and sculpt, creating forms and – like Blender or 3D Coat – letting the app add geometry as needed. Blender (opens in new tab)Īn alternative to Blender is Sculptris. It's a little unconventional and slightly rough around the edges, but 3D Coat provides serious competition to the big guns from Pixologic and Autodesk. Not only that but the app also has a comprehensive UV mapping and a painting toolset which supports UV texturing, micro-vertex painting and Ptex UV-less texturing – all of which are useful for any CG modellers, not just 3D Coat users. The sculpted shape is then turned into a surface (ignoring the volume beneath and speeding up operations), where it then works much like any sculpting app.īecause 3D Coat objects are made from triangles, the finished model needs to be retopologised to create a workable mesh, and the app provides some excellent automatic and manual retopologising tools. The advantage over more traditional polygon-based system is that you don't need to worry about the underlying topolgy you simply draw out a volume, adding or removing geometry at will, and the program adds voxels as necessary. 3D Coat takes a different approach to the other apps here, in that the user sculpts using voxels, or three-dimensional pixels. Modo (opens in new tab)Īppearing pretty much out of nowhere, 3D Coat was developed by Andrew Shpagin, a Ukrainian game dev tool programmer. You can of course texture your models in Cinema 4D using Bodypaint, but users are hoping for an integrated sculpting/painting system in a future update. The newly announced R16 update adds even more features with drawing along splines, poly selection masking and the use of procedural materials as stencils and masks. The system also features mirroring and mesh projection, which transfers your high-res sculpted detail onto a low-res poly mesh for retopologising. ![]() Like ZBrush and Mudbox, it features multi-resolution sculpting, with advanced symmetry options and comes with a range of brushes, stencils and stamps for adding fine details.īecause it's an integral part of the program, you can sculpt your object, and then immediately do a full render with it in situ, and the sculpting tools work across the app, so you can smooth out irregular points, for example. One of the surprise features introduced with the 2012 release of Cinema 4D Studio R14 was its new sculpting module. ![]()
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