Texture Creation - Basic Tutorial: Difference between revisions

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== Create your material file ==
== Create your material file ==
Create a material for the texture. In the materials folder, create a file like <code>mytex.mtr</code>, and add the following:
 
Create a material for the texture. In the materials folder, locate the material file where you texture fits in best. Then add the following:


  textures/your_desired_editor_texture_folder/your_texture_name
  textures/your_desired_editor_texture_folder/your_texture_name
  {
  {
     [TDM has custom surface types here.  for example, wood, stone, glass]
     // Use on of the predefined surface types like stone, glass, wood
    stone
    // or use this:
    // surfaceType 15
    // and make the first word in the description below your texture type,
    // like so:
    // description  "foliage This is a grass texture"
 
    description      "Add here a little description of your texture"
     qer_editorimage  textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name_ed
     qer_editorimage  textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name_ed
   
   
Line 111: Line 119:


Oh, and on Windows, use Wordpad, not Notepad. That's it. Your new texture should appear in both the editor and in-game.
Oh, and on Windows, use Wordpad, not Notepad. That's it. Your new texture should appear in both the editor and in-game.
See [[Basic Material File]] for more information.


== Summary ==
== Summary ==
Line 124: Line 130:
* DONE
* DONE


Those who know more about this than me (I've been doing it all of one day so far) are encouraged to contribute tips if you have them.
== Further Information ==
 
Further reading:


* [[Common Texture Mistakes]]
* [[Common Texture Mistakes]]
* [[How_to_add_Textures_to_The_Dark_Mod]]
* [[How_to_add_Textures_to_The_Dark_Mod]]
* [[Basic Material File]]


== Links ==
== Links ==

Revision as of 22:37, 29 October 2007

Originally written by SneaksieDave on http://forums.thedarkmod.com/topic/3814

A game like this needs a TON of textures. So I wanted to try to learn how to do this mysterious, wonderous, magick...

Erm, well, it's not magick. Far from it, in fact. This tutorial isn't for those of you who already know how to do this*, and already know it's not magick. This tutorial is for the rest of us, those who have been too scared or lazy to even bother asking "how do I?", like me. (It's the former, honest!)

Prerequisites

You can use Gimp or Photoshop on Windows, for Linux you should use Gimp. So you'll need either of the two programs Gimp/Photoshop and the corresponding set of plugins:

Photoshop

Gimp

If you are using Kubuntu/Ubuntu, you can also install the gimp-texturize and gimp-resynthesizer packages.

To compile Gimp plugins from source, install the following packages and their dependecies:

  • libgimp2.0-dev
  • libgtk1.2-dev
  • libglut3-dev (for the DDS plugin)

Get your source picture

This could be anything from a photograph you took, to a free texture download from the internet, to a hand drawn picture, if you're one of those fortunate enough to possess that skill - though we generally prefer to work from photo-reference when possible.

If you do want to take photos, some tips:

  • try to shoot on an overcast day; the diffuse light will remove most unwanted shadows
  • try to take the photo as perfectly face-on to the surface as you can manage.

If your end result isn't perfect, don't worry, there are ways to fix it (transform->skew, to name one)

  • Make sure that all parts of your photo you want to use as texture are in focus (e.g. sharp). Unsharp parts cannot be fixed later, at least not without a big quality loss!
  • try to select an area that will be tile-able (if that's what you want)
  • try to capture a large area such that you'll have enough to work with, but not so big that your resolution on the final product will suffer

Create the diffuse map

The diffuse map is a tilable (usally) image which gives the color infomation, but does not contain lighting or height information for the texture.

Photoshop

Inspect the source image. If you're going to tile it, try to find a regular repeating area. This is only to make your job easier. You can tile anything, really, but it depends on how much work you want to give yourself. If you don't know what I mean here, at the next step you will.

After you've chosen a rough tile-able area (from here forward I'm going to assume you are doing a tiled texture), crop that area out, and size your image to the desired size ratio. I wouldn't go lower than 1024 resolution at this stage of the work, or you'll start losing picture quality quickly. So set it to 2048X1024, or 1024X1024, etc. The reason we need to fix the size ratio (not the final size) at this stage is for the next step.

Set the offset

Go to Filter->Other->Offset. You want to set the horizontal and vertical to be exactly half of your cropped picture's width and height. That will make the opposite edges of the texture meet each other in the middle of the view, so you can make it really tile-able.

Make the seams disappear

See those seams running right down the middle of the pic, vertically and horizontally? You have to make them disappear. Get to know the clone tool. (Google...) There are many other ways to shuffle pixels too, but I'll leave the specifics up to you. This is usually the hardest, most time consuming step.

Once you've blended the lines away, run the Offset filter again to restore the correct layout of your pic, and save it out in a nice high quality (but not too big to manage) format. This is the "diffuse" image. We're using 24bit TGA for TDM.

Gimp

Use the texturizer or the resynthezier plugin - these are very easy to work with and make manual work almost needless.

Create a normal map

Photoshop

Now that the diffuse is done, using that same pic, open Filter->Nvidia Tools->NormalMapFilter. You'll probably have to play with the values for a while to get a feel for it, and to get a normal map you are happy with. This is a rough approximation method, by no means as accurate as actually modelling a texture, but it works pretty good in most cases. Basically, it will make light areas "high" and dark areas "low". Learn how to manipulate color levels in Photoshop, and you'll be making good normal maps with the Nvidia filter in no time. Generally, use values of 3 or 4 for simple things like woodgrain or nails. Values of 12 or higher can be used for more 3d effects.

If you think about it, there are countless ways to adjust the image (in fact, you're not even restricted to using the diffuse image as the base of the normal map...) to get desired results - inverting colors, brightness and contrast controls, painting over areas, gradients, etc. It's a "feel" thing, so you'll have to develop that for yourself. After creating your desired normal map (try not to make it too blurry, or too sharp, or too bumpy - yuck), save it out as you did with the diffuse image, with "_local" appended.

Gimp

Use the Normalmap plugin. (XXX TODO: Add a short tutorial here)

Create an editor image

As the diffusemap is very large it takes some time loading it into the editor, this is why DarkRadiant/DoomEd support the display of lowres editor images replacements. Just resize the diffusemap down to max. 256 pixels and save it in JPG format, but be sure to attach the _ed suffix.

Add a specular map

If you want a specular map, the process is even more subjective. There are countless ways in Photoshop to adjust color and light level and even invert everything or parts or mask out areas. Specular maps work as such: Darker is rendered as dull, lighter is rendered as shiny. Get it? Think of the possibilities, and have fun with it. You can get some pretty amazing results with just minutes of work. Save that image out as you did the diffuse, with "_s" appended.

Note that most surface types don't need a specular map. Only shiny surfaces, like metal or wet stone, really need one, while wood, cobbles, canvas, leaves, dirt etc. should not have a specular map.

Create your material file

Create a material for the texture. In the materials folder, locate the material file where you texture fits in best. Then add the following:

textures/your_desired_editor_texture_folder/your_texture_name
{
   // Use on of the predefined surface types like stone, glass, wood
   stone
   // or use this:
   // surfaceType 15
   // and make the first word in the description below your texture type,
   // like so:
   // description   "foliage This is a grass texture"
   description      "Add here a little description of your texture"
   qer_editorimage  textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name_ed

   bumpmap          textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name_local
   diffusemap       textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name
   specularmap      textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name_s

   // This is the code required for frob highlighting this texture
   {
       if ( parm11 > 0 )
       blend       gl_dst_color, gl_one
       map         _white.tga
       rgb         0.40 * parm11
   }
   {
       if ( parm11 > 0 )
       blend       add
       map         textures/your_file_folder/your_texture_name
       rgb         0.15 * parm11
   }
}

Oh, and on Windows, use Wordpad, not Notepad. That's it. Your new texture should appear in both the editor and in-game.

Summary

So you see, it's really quite simple:

  • Crop the desired area
  • Make it tileable if necessary
  • Generate a normal map
  • Generate an editor image
  • Create a specular map if you want one
  • Include it in a material file
  • DONE

Further Information

Links

Photoshop

Gimp

Assorted tutorials