• @RightHandOfIkaros
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    10 months ago

    These work well enough. Though next time, I offer this advice:

    Any time you are attempting to create a certain kind of damage on a model, try to think about what caused the damage. How did it get crushed, what crushed it, what material was that made of, etc. Then try to find pictures of that kind of damage in real life, usually from car crashes or construction site vehicle accidents (the ones without major injuries). It can help give a clearer picture of the effects certain kind of damages cause. This is also helpful for the painting stage later on.

    For example, a crate that dropped is going to have different damage compared to a crate that got smashed by a heavier crate being on top or a forklift piercing the side of it. Hitting wood will leave different marks than hitting concrete or metal.

    • CavalinaOP
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      1110 months ago

      @RightHandOfIkaros
      These are getting crushed under a titan’s foot as it steps on them, thus the sledgehammer to simulate weight at scale. I just can’t decide if they need to be more crushed, or if this reads as “just stepping on to”.

      • @RightHandOfIkaros
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        510 months ago

        I think if thats the case, it may be helpful to try and get the shape of the titans foot as a more clearly defined imprint in the center of the crushed area across all the crates. But as it is it is mostly fine for “this was crushed by something” and you can repurpose it later for other stories too.

        • CavalinaOP
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          410 months ago

          @RightHandOfIkaros
          The size of the foot is making that difficult, so I pivoted to just “general crushiness” but I still want it to visually translate.

          • @RightHandOfIkaros
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            10 months ago

            I understand. Im not saying the whole outline of the foot should be present, just something that can pass as a partial print, if I am explaining correctly. Overall it is fine as it is, as perhaps the foot print can be more defined with paint, or more dirt or wear on the place where the foot contacted the crate.

      • jumblies
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        410 months ago

        @thatdamnelf @RightHandOfIkaros This is one of the neatest questions I’ve seen on here.

        What you have there is great.

        I think nonuniform crushing would be worth a look. If you look at footsteps in sand or mud, the pressure isn’t uniform. Toe off is the most pressure typically. Also, some crates will squash flat.