Skinning Tutorial Part 3: Specular Mapping
Skinning Tutorial Part 3: Specular Mapping
Last edited by Boblob801 on Wed Dec 19, 2018 10:52 am, edited 2 times in total.
Hi
Re: Skinning Tutorial Part 3: Specular Mapping
Thanks for the videos, not a 100% clear on spec maps yet though, I thought I was, especially since your video confirmed what I understood, but sometimes I do a change supposedly knowing what the result will be but nothing changes.
For example, how would you do a matte pipe on the spec map? If I understood it well, I would make it black with low hardness, is that right?
For example, how would you do a matte pipe on the spec map? If I understood it well, I would make it black with low hardness, is that right?
Re: Skinning Tutorial Part 3: Specular Mapping
Yeap, although if you go full transparent then it will use the specular settings provided from the materials in blender. You'll find that the hardness settings aka alpha channel don't vary a lot. Meaning you need to make large changes to see a difference.Axionkt wrote:Thanks for the videos, not a 100% clear on spec maps yet though, I thought I was, especially since your video confirmed what I understood, but sometimes I do a change supposedly knowing what the result will be but nothing changes.
For example, how would you do a matte pipe on the spec map? If I understood it well, I would make it black with low hardness, is that right?
Hi
Re: Skinning Tutorial Part 3: Specular Mapping
Ok that's where I made a mistake, I was trying to go to the extreme, to see the range I could play with so it was probably using the specular from the material.Boblob801 wrote:Yeap, although if you go full transparent then it will use the specular settings provided from the materials in blender. You'll find that the hardness settings aka alpha channel don't vary a lot. Meaning you need to make large changes to see a difference.
Thanks for the clarification, going to do some more experimenting.