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Blender 3D Cookbook

You're reading from   Blender 3D Cookbook Build your very own stunning characters in Blender from scratch

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783984886
Length 608 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Enrico Valenza Enrico Valenza
Author Profile Icon Enrico Valenza
Enrico Valenza
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Modeling the Character's Base Mesh FREE CHAPTER 2. Sculpting the Character's Base Mesh 3. Polygonal Modeling of the Character's Accessories 4. Re-topology of the High Resolution Sculpted Character's Mesh 5. Unwrapping the Low Resolution Mesh 6. Rigging the Low Resolution Mesh 7. Skinning the Low Resolution Mesh 8. Finalizing the Model 9. Animating the Character 10. Creating the Textures 11. Refining the Textures 12. Creating the Materials in Cycles 13. Creating the Materials in Blender Internal 14. Lighting, Rendering, and a Little Bit of Compositing Index

Using the Multiresolution modifier and the Dynamic topology feature

To be sculpted, a mesh needs a big enough amount of vertices to allow the adding of details; in short, we now need a way to add (a lot of!) geometry to our simple base mesh.

Besides the usual subdividing operation in Edit Mode (press Tab, then A to select all the vertices, then press W to call the Specials menu, click on Subdivide, and then set the Number of Cuts value in the last operation subpanel at the bottom of the Tool Shelf) and the Subdivision Surface modifier, in Blender, there are two other ways to increase the amount of vertices: one is by assigning a Multiresolution modifier to the mesh (a nondestructive way) and the other is by using the Dynamic topology feature. We are going to see both of them.

Getting ready

As usual, let's start from the last .blend file we saved: in this case, Gidiosaurus_Sculpt_base.blend.

How to do it…

Let's start with the Multiresolution modifier method:

  1. First of all, save...
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