PlyEdit: 3D Paint

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The painting process is quite simple: The painting process is quite simple:
-; 1] : Select a view of the polymesh that you would like to paint.+; 1] : {{img|PlyEdit-paint2.jpg|Step 1: Select View}} Select a view of the polymesh that you would like to paint.
: In this situation an Ortho projection may be better than Persp as parts of the polymesh further from the camera will be given the same pixel coverage as closer parts. : In this situation an Ortho projection may be better than Persp as parts of the polymesh further from the camera will be given the same pixel coverage as closer parts.

Revision as of 08:53, 15 December 2010

Cover Page
About PlyEdit
Loading Meshes
Mesh Display
Basic Tools
    H - Hiding
    V - Voiding
    F - Filling
Brushes
    G - Mark
    3 - Noise
    4/5 - Sculpt
    6 - Smooth
    7 - Comb
Macros
Reduce/Multiply
Import Align Combine
Other Tools
    Body Dewobble
    3D Paint
    Dirt
Clean
Saving Meshes
Undo
Glossary
Download PDF
If your mesh contains CPV color, PlyEdit has a number of tools for touching up or completely replacing that color information.

Color Tools

Fig 1. 3D Paint
Fig 1. 3D Paint
Clear 
The color of all faces is set to white.
Mask 
The color of all unmarked faces is set to black.
Recolor 
Overlays a representation of the surface shading into the color itself.
Gamma 
Globally lighten (values less than 1) or darken (values greater than 1) the color information.
Smooth 
Smooths the color by the level indicated.

3D Paint

There is no painting within CySlice itself; what the 3D Paint tool does is provides an interface between PlyEdit and 2D paint programs. The only requirement is that the paint application can read and write TIFF formatted image files.

In this description GIMP, a free multi-platform application (see gimp.org), is used as the external 2D paintbox. Commercial products, such as Photoshop, would work just as well.

The painting process is quite simple:

1] 
Fig 2. Step 1: Select View
Fig 2. Step 1: Select View
Select a view of the polymesh that you would like to paint.
In this situation an Ortho projection may be better than Persp as parts of the polymesh further from the camera will be given the same pixel coverage as closer parts.
Also consider hiding parts of the polymesh that you don't want to paint. Say you have a whole creature, but only wanted to paint the head, hide the rest of the body. This will speed up the color export and import process.
Name 
Mult 
Facing only 
Visible only 
Extract 
Project 

Dirt

Fig 3. Dirt
Fig 3. Dirt