PlyEdit: 3D Paint
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; 4] Paint : Paint away, making sure that the background layer is selected, not the shading overlay (see {{fig}}). | ; 4] Paint : Paint away, making sure that the background layer is selected, not the shading overlay (see {{fig}}). | ||
- | : What you do here is only limited by what you can do in your paintbox. You could even import and overlay images from other sources, such as texture libraries or digital cameras. The only restriction is that you don't change the size or orientation of the background layer. | + | : What you do here is only limited by what you can do in your paintbox. You could even import and overlay images from other sources, such as texture libraries or digital cameras. The only restriction is that you don't change the size or orientation of the background layer. {{img|PlyEdit-paint6.jpg|Check and Save}} |
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+ | ; 5] Check and Save : Turn off the shading overlay to check that the color you painted looks OK (see {{fig}}). Of course, you can do this at any time during the painting stage. | ||
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+ | : Once you're happy with the painted color, delete the shading overlay and save the modified color image. Simply overwrite the original file, '''out.p.tif''' by default. | ||
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Revision as of 09:18, 15 December 2010
If your mesh contains CPV color, PlyEdit has a number of tools for touching up or completely replacing that color information.
Color Tools
3D PaintThere is no painting within PlyEdit 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:
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