It looks like it's time to put to bed the "how to draw an owl in 2 steps" meme.
Some generated creatures are straight out of the animal uncanny valley. So amazing and fun. It's even better than "Quick, Draw!" by Google. Can't wait to see what the Internet will make out of this.
The help tutorial is really well done for something that is a little bit complex, and holy heck - that's fun!
You can export a "template for texturing" then color it in Gimp, and re-upload it to give it colors and features. You can download the model too. Not sure what the "project" format is though - can you pull the animations straight into Blender?
I tried playing with the demo on the site. I've got a bunch of sketches I drew in black and white with pen scanned into my computer. I was hoping I could import one of then. It seems like the only options allow you to import then redraw over. Lacking a drawing tablet or anything, this is unfeasible.
A tool that allows you to import line drawings and convert them to inflatable models would be amazing.
I've never been a big fan of drawing with a stylus and tablet. It's not the same as using a pen.
Obviously, Monster Mash is way more advanced and includes animation features, but ever since Teddy I wondered why there weren't bigger 3D modeling packages embracing sketch-based sculpting.
skimmed over this twice - and I see there is an online demo that works.. but nothing that says if the self run version is mac only, (? the github says to compile with some other library, linux?)
and I get the sad-feeling when I see "a sketch-based.." - because sketch is mac only I thought?
the gif-like animations are cool - better than text for showing what it - like that.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 60.2 ms ] threadSome generated creatures are straight out of the animal uncanny valley. So amazing and fun. It's even better than "Quick, Draw!" by Google. Can't wait to see what the Internet will make out of this.
[1] https://dust3d.org/
(If you like this article of course)
You can export a "template for texturing" then color it in Gimp, and re-upload it to give it colors and features. You can download the model too. Not sure what the "project" format is though - can you pull the animations straight into Blender?
I tried playing with the demo on the site. I've got a bunch of sketches I drew in black and white with pen scanned into my computer. I was hoping I could import one of then. It seems like the only options allow you to import then redraw over. Lacking a drawing tablet or anything, this is unfeasible.
A tool that allows you to import line drawings and convert them to inflatable models would be amazing.
I've never been a big fan of drawing with a stylus and tablet. It's not the same as using a pen.
http://pixologic.com/zclassroom/workshop/snapshot3d
https://zbrushcore.com/features.php
Just DL and instal it and you are all good.
But you do need to make an account in Paul Graham’s name to confirm you like the software.
https://www-ui.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~takeo/teddy/teddy.htm
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=adfdtUn2r4U
Obviously, Monster Mash is way more advanced and includes animation features, but ever since Teddy I wondered why there weren't bigger 3D modeling packages embracing sketch-based sculpting.
the gif-like animations are cool - better than text for showing what it - like that.