I promise, last day of the pallets, and to finish this a little surprise at the end.
We finished two pallets yesterday, and how many will we make today? No more talking, let’s go to work.
You guessed right, we will continue to make pallets today, more pallets and texture them too, I hope. As I said yesterday, new tools open new possibilities and I am that kind of person that strive to use, abuse and master whatever is tossed at me. If not for any other real reason that to say “I did it!“.
One thing I haven’t made yet as a prop for map making are pallets. Mostly because pallets are not very common in a fantasy world, but now when I also make some modern things, I thought that they would be perfect items to create.
OK, we will continue with our queen statue today, so why chit-chat, let’s get going.
This is something I tried to make as someone made an art request on Dundjinni Forum, and I thought it would be something fun to test.
I got tons of stuff for DAZ 3D, and this was a chance to try to use some of all those downloaded freebies.
So, I’ve succeeded with something I set out to do, which was much harder that I first thought. Much harder because I didn’t have the right tools and didn’t fully understand the intricate file structures of a posable poser file, but, here is how I did it, using the tools at hand, mostly DAZ Studio3.
For my underground cave, I need some broken pieces of walls, brick walls, and I’ve been using some pieces I’ve rendered with Carrara 8 from the Temple Ruins set, but I needed something different.
Now I will show something that we hopefully have played, as it will be a spoiler, or could be. We’re gonna make two things today, and I will try not to spoil too much if we haven’t played this yet. I need something strange, occult or magical, some kind of bowl with a burning magical fire in it.
I needed some wall mounted lights for the map, electric lamps that look modern but still not too modern. I think they look too modern for 1930, but I wasn’t around at the time and finding picture of wall mounted lamps from that time was really hard.