PlyEdit: 3D Paint
From Headus Docs
(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 09:00, 15 December 2010 (edit) Headus (Talk | contribs) (→3D Paint) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 09:06, 15 December 2010 (edit) (undo) Headus (Talk | contribs) (→3D Paint) Next diff → |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
; Step 2] : {{img|PlyEdit-paint3.jpg|Step 2: Extract Color}} Click the '''Extract''' button. This writes the color and surface shading into two separate files; by default, '''out.p.tif''' and '''out.s.tif'''. | ; Step 2] : {{img|PlyEdit-paint3.jpg|Step 2: Extract Color}} Click the '''Extract''' button. This writes the color and surface shading into two separate files; by default, '''out.p.tif''' and '''out.s.tif'''. | ||
- | : To change the filename prefix edit the '''Name''' field. To change the save directory, click on the right arrow after the '''Name''' field. | + | : To change the filename prefix edit the '''Name''' field. To change the save directory, click on the right arrow after the '''Name''' field. |
+ | |||
+ | : Normally the extracted color images are the same resolution as the display window, but if the mesh being edited is very dense, some faces may be smaller than a pixel in size. To fix this, increase the resolution of the extracted images with the '''Mult''' value. | ||
: The left side of {{fig}} shows the extracted color, a blank canvas because Clear was used before painting, and the right side is the surface shading. | : The left side of {{fig}} shows the extracted color, a blank canvas because Clear was used before painting, and the right side is the surface shading. |
Revision as of 09:06, 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:
Dirt |