are you sculpting something? or you just want to see other people's projects? post here then
"Finished" this today. In quotes because I'd work towards making it printable to actually finish it, but I don't think it's a skill you can get without having an actual printer. Also I've zero idea on how to make good looking cloth folds, so I just skip making them at all for now. I wonder if anyone guesses the character.
>>1001184i hate cloth it's so complicated to do
>>1001188who in their right mind sculpts clothes.use marvelous designer niggers.
following this. it's not going very well. can't imagine how I'll fair when it comes to more complicated stuff that requires anatomy https://youtu.be/KURuPAVJ6hM?si=BmkqcCVxsttFw3MO
>>1001184You don't need a printer just slicing software
>>1001184cute useless wifealso her baos look a bit flat
>>1001248Thanks for the advice. I'm assuming that's stuff like cura or prusaslicer? I've googled a bit on how to use those but it seems like they can mostly slice using planes. Is that really suitable for complex objects? I see meshmixer can cut using a lasso-like tool. Is that software better for complex objects? All I know is blendhurr.>>1002002Oh. I wasn't sure what they're even called so I just referenced the tiny ingame sprite. They're called "chinese manju" ingame and I didn't bother researching, my bad.Also here's a sculpting question: how "rough"/sharp are bodies, really? What I mean is, I think that a lot of visual smoothness of the human body comes from subsurface scattering softening shadows by letting light through and bodies can actually get fairly sharp. But is that true? Here's a picture to illustrate. I know I'm not very good, but still. Left is what I'm sculpting on and off now, and right is the model in >>1001184 while it was still in T-pose. It looked similar to the left, but then I thought it was too rough so I smoothed the shit out of it. Is that the right thing to do, or should one keep sharp features and rely material scattering to visually soften them out? I feel I can't quite nail the balance of how sharp features actually get.
>>1002018for anime figures you're mostly going to be using resin printing, the slicers for that are Lychee and Chituboxthey're called "slicers" but you don't cut the figures using them, they're just for the exporting process, you still cut the figures into pieces in Blender or your preferred 3D softwarehonestly making a file you can release to be 3D printed and painted is a lot of work that doesn't involve sculpting, I wouldn't worry about it right now, just keep improving
>>1001181i got bored of this so I wont finish it>>1001184this is nice