Friday, January 19, 2018

Revolving and Lofting



This week, we were assigned to create two things in Maya: a cup and a salt shaker. How did we do this? Simple. Revolving and lofting. Now you might be wondering, "Maddie, what even is revolving and lofting, and what does it entail?" Well, allow me to explain.

Revolving is sort of like making something on a potter's wheel. You start with a simple NURBS curve, then you shape it into what looks like a cross-section of whatever you're going to make. Then you just click Revolve on the Modeling menu and spin it around an axis, and ta-da! You have your object.

Lofting is more akin to building a structure. You start with a NURBS surface and shape it into the base for whatever you are creating, then duplicate it and move the duplicates up until you have it at the height you want. You can also use NURBS surfaces that are differently shaped. Then, once you have the framework for whatever you are creating, you go to the Surfaces menu, click Loft, and voila! You have just successfully lofted.

Friday, January 12, 2018

Hammer Project



This week, we were assigned to make a hammer in Maya. Now, I'm not very good with Maya, and the many things that went wrong during this project is a prime example of that. However, it turned out pretty well despite that.

The first thing we had to do was model the hammer. It was easy at first, but once it got to shaping the claw, I encountered a problem- whenever I transformed something, I was doing it to the entire shape. Thankfully, after a quick Google search, I was able to fix it, and I continued onwards, shaping the head of the hammer as well as tapering in the handle.

Next, we had to shade the hammer. Shading was, by far, the easiest part. All I had to do was apply a brown lambert to the handle and apply a shiny metallic texture to the head.

Finally, we had to do 3-point lighting around the hammer. This was, by far, the most difficult part, because no matter what I did with my 3 spotlights, it would be too dark when it rendered. Finally, after hours of experimenting, I managed to use 3 extremely wide and bright lights to make the hammer visible, and after exporting it as a PNG, I turned up the contrast in the color settings on Preview. Overall, I think it turned out pretty good.