Thursday, 22 October 2015

3D Materials

For design work this week we focused on improving texturing and the appearance of objects when they are imported from 3DS Max into Unity. Setting a block of colour to an object gives it a very unrealistic appearance so effects can be used to make them look much nicer. In real life, objects like walls are slightly bumpy and never completely smooth, therefore adding a single sheet of colour will make it look strange. This can be helped by adding a layer of noise, which will create a form of static and make the wall look slightly bumpy, giving it an overall more realistic feel.

To practice to texturing we did last week, we were tasked with creating a cube and adding a different texture to each side. The six different textures were: brick, gravel, window, carpet, clean wall and dirty wall.
Carpet, clean wall and dirty wall

Gravel, brick and window

We then went into Unity and learnt about editing materials to change their appearance and tailor them to specific objects. The two settings we focused on were metallic and smoothness. The metallic setting determines how light is reflected off the object; the higher the setting, the more reflective the object is and the less colour is visible. Smoothness increases the objects micro surface detail and makes things look more or less glossy. For example, a wooden or stone object will have very little, if any, of either of these settings. Whilst a plastic or metal object will have larger values of each.
Stone(left), plastic(centre) and metal(right) materials

The final thing we were taught was that when an object from 3DS Max is imported into Unity, it's textures can be edited to change the materials appearance. This is very useful when you import an object and want to make the separate components look like different materials. To practice this I created a table in 3DS Max and imported it, then changed the settings to make the legs look metallic and the actual table top look like varnished wood with a plastic edging.
Render in 3DS Max
Changed materials in Unity

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