Giovanii Fellini Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 Greetings! I've been trying to learn Blender over the last few months and I'll admit I'm still noob -(BTW, thanks for the tutorials Chic) I'm getting a little hung up on baking textures on different surfaces like floors, walls...inner, outer, etc. It looks great in render view, but when I bake, I must be missing some ingredients, because it looks really whacked. Also when selecting the entire floor, in order to scale down my textures, my UV map becomes much larger than the box that it's supposed to fit into and of course looks weird. https://gyazo.com/394a3e52ae8441037ca53e336c543afb Should I be separating parts of the build into more manageable, bite sized pieces? Does it matter if the walls are cubes vs planes? I know, lot's of questions. Any guidance is much appreciated. I haven't even thought about physics yet... Well, OK, I've thought about it but I'll leave that until I get this part figured out Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chic Aeon Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 (edited) 1 hour ago, Giovanii Fellini said: Also when selecting the entire floor, in order to scale down my textures, my UV map becomes much larger than the box that it's supposed to fit into and of course looks weird. Here are some examples that may help (Blender 2.79). My current project. This is baked on a 2048 texture plane. I think what you are asking is how to get your textures to TILE on this big area? If so (in Cycles) here is how it can be done. Have no idea really how you are working but this may help. The FLOOR would take up the whole texture plane (another texture plane obviously). Now textures this big are never going to look the same as your rendered view when they get into SL. If you want THAT you would need to break the textures into more large planes and most likely DESIGN for that so you wouldn't have seams. So INWORLD, here is how my floor looks (note no material maps are used ). If you use normal and specular maps be SURE and test with the Linden viewer with EEP. So you have to decide if you are willing to live with some "blur" OR if you want to use a whole 2048 textures (uploads to 1024) for the porch :D. That is a personal "designer" choice. But you can TILE the textures as you like === easily. I am pretty darn sure that was in a fairly early tutorial LOL. But maybe not so important on a "picture frame" or whatever *wink*. It shouldn't matter whether there are planes or cubes for your walls but there is no reason to upload any quads that will not be seen. So you can delete all "inside of wall" types faces. In this case I also dissolved the walls before uploading BUT it is really important not to do that until the end as it pretty much finalizes things and makes changes much more difficult. Hope that helps some. Edited July 2, 2020 by Chic Aeon 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gordon Nadezda Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 3 hours ago, Chic Aeon said: It shouldn't matter whether there are planes or cubes for your walls but there is no reason to upload any quads that will not be seen. So you can delete all "inside of wall" types faces. In this case I also dissolved the walls before uploading BUT it is really important not to do that until the end as it pretty much finalizes things and makes changes much more difficult. Hope that helps some. I hope you guys don't mind if I ask a question about something indirectly related. Chic, do you use Archipack within Blender for your walls or just plain cubes and/or planes? What do you think of that add-on? 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chic Aeon Posted July 2, 2020 Share Posted July 2, 2020 16 minutes ago, Gordon Nadezda said: I hope you guys don't mind if I ask a question about something indirectly related. Chic, do you use Archipack within Blender for your walls or just plain cubes and/or planes? What do you think of that add-on? I looked at it long ago but I just build from cubes. Learned that way and stuck with it. It seemed (only from other's reports) that it had as much downside to it as upside. So I basically build houses like I would build furniture -- except of course for the physics :D. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Giovanii Fellini Posted July 3, 2020 Author Share Posted July 3, 2020 I'm looking at the info above... and so far it's very helpful in scaling the textures. I'll let you know when I move on to the next step Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tami Amat Posted July 14, 2020 Share Posted July 14, 2020 I may use that info too, Chic. Appreciate the screenshots. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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