Thank you so much. I don't know why but the Clo tutorials about maps just confused me. Now I understand the maps. Looks like you can get many effects just by playing around with the maps
@@BobbinTalk I guess I am trying to understand- of all these 6 maps, which ones do you mainly use? Like I can understand that the opacity map is only really used with lace, and the metalnesss (and maybe roughness) are really primarily used with a metallic material, but texture / normal and displacement used for knits, like you said in video? And if you use a displacement map, does that negate the use of a normal map? And finally, is it just the normal and displacement that I need like the normal map generator or photoshop to generate the maps? Like seams like texture, and can just use a jpg image that I want to use as a base. And the opacity, I just use a b&w jpg like you said. Maybe I need to watch your video again….
Excellent tutorial, but what do you recommend if I wanted to apply an image to a certain texture without losing the properties of that texture, simulating a sublimated fabric?
Not sure what you’re asking. Adding a map just gives an appearance depending on which map you’re using. It does not change the properties of the fabric.
From What I’ve learned from Aneta, I think your base fabric that tou are using already has a texture (it’s woven or knitted surface appearance and rigidity or fluidity) all set up before you apply a print to it via Texture map (basically, a print or color) even though it’s called texture map, it’s really just surface coloration. Displacement map and normal map are where the weave and bumps Of the fabric actually happen. And I know, it’s very confusing at first! Are you doing sublimation printing on a base fabric thats already in your library, like a simple woven cotton or something? From what Aneta says here I think the TEXTURE map, the first one on the list, is where you add a print or pattern without changing the behavior or appearance of the fabric’s surface beyond color/ print. This is what I’m getting based on Aneta’s awesome videos
Hello, sorry for asking you, could you tell me what you think is the most common cotton t-shirt fabric, or what name appears in Clo3D for "cotton jersey"? I still couldn't identify it, thank you very much.
ok, because I'm making a cotton t-shirt with a print and I can't identify which is the corresponding fabric for the type of classic, common and current t-shirts.
Haven't experienced that! Is it possible that you edited your texture before you added the map to it? Even the smallest edit will affect how the map looks on it.