Creating New Clothing Textures for Daz 3D - Viking Visual Art Tutorial

avatar

I had a request on DeviantArt this week. Requests on DeviantArt tend to be unpaid (or maybe some "point" (their crypto) if you're lucky, so I figured I'd include my process here. The work is going to be NSFW, but this part of the process won't be while I'm designing my characters.

He requested that the female character is dressed in armor-textured clothing. Guess what? I don't have any armor-textured clothing, so I'm going to have to create it myself. I do not (yet) have the required skills to create Daz 3D clothing from scratch, but I can take something I already have and put new textures on it, so that's what I'm going to do.

I plan to give my contact a choice between several pieces of clothing, but the process will be the same for each piece, so I've chosen the pieces with the largest coverage. If the texture works for these, it will work for everything I need for the moment.

I'm starting with my Victoria 6 character (on a Genesis 2 base). She's wearing basic wear top and magus bottoms as well as Pixie Perfect Hair. All are made by Daz 3D Studio.

armor_clothing_01.png

Step 1

The first thing I do is go to my Google images search and find "seamless armor texture" with CC0 licensing. I save everything I like into my "textures" folder.

Step 2

Now, I have to see whether any of the textures tile nicely. Even though "seamless" means it should tile nicely, they don't always. I'm creating a fabric, so it really must be seamless.

Gimp might be able to salvage one that's almost seamless, but we'll see.

Seamless textures can be difficult to find, especially if you want to find something that doesn't require you to pay for it.

Here is what I found on Pixabay:
armorplate2204104_960_720.jpg

As a photo, It's not great. It's on the blurry side (and it's not seamless), but maybe I can make use of it.

Here it is after I've hit the "make seamless" and "small tiles" filters in Gimp (both found under "filters" then "maps".)

armorplateseamless_tiles.jpg

Not too bad.

Before I go onto step 3, I'm just going to test a couple other textures I found and see if anything else works better.

Step 3

Next, I have to import my new textures into Gimp. This is much easier than it sounds, I promise!

First, in your file explorer locate your new textures.
Also locate your textures (or patterns) in Gimp. (On Gimp, that is usually located in: C:users/(user name)/gimp (version)/patterns

armor_clothing_03.png

I simply drag and drop from my textures folder to my patterns folder. (You might prefer to copy/paste so that your original textures folder has the full set. I am actually dragging between hard drives, so it actually does copy/paste by default.)

Back in Gimp, below the panel of patterns, there's a refresh button. Click on that to show your new textures.

Finally, you're ready to fix the clothing textures.

Step 4

Now, I go back to Daz and grab the file location of the material maps for the clothing I want to alter.

I make sure the item of clothing is selected in the top right section of the screen, then go down to the bottom right section and click on surfaces.

armor_clothing_02.png

As I hover over the image part of "diffuse color" I see the location of the file on my computer.

Back in Gimp, I open that file.

Let me just stress that now is the time you need to resave your texture so that you don't mess up the original work (which you may or may not be able to find again.)

Here is the original file.

s051Top04.jpg

Step 5

All I'm doing here is replacing the current picture with one of my armored textures.

I will use the one that I found on Pixabay first.

The easiest way to do this is to use my area selector to select the black background, then invert the selection (CTRL + I). Then, I click on the pattern I want to use, select my paint bucket. Making sure that "pattern fill" is selected as well as "fill whole selection" in my "tool options", I fill the selected area with my armor texture.

Here is the Pixabay pattern.

s051TopArmor1.jpg

If you haven't already, "export as"... and change just enough of the title to know what it is. I leave the file name alone and add something to the end. In this case, I added "armor 1" to the file name and exported. (I keep my new texture in the same folder as all the old ones so that I can find it again.)

Step 6

Finally, I will put the new material on my character.

Back on the "diffuse color" place where I grabbed the location of the file originally, I click on the picture, then "browse". The correct folder should automatically come up, but you can otherwise navigate to the location again. (Some items, you might have to scroll down the surfaces tab and see if any other spots need the old texture replaced with your new one.)

Here is my final for the top.

armor_clothing_04.png

Now, to test out my other textures on the other clothing - and to find out what my requester wants.


All work done by myself on: Gimp and Daz 3D Studio
(Armor texture from Pixabay.)
Cross-posted on: Steem, Whaleshares, WeKu

Past A'mara Books tutorials:

DAZ 3D tutorials (not A'mara Books related):

Organizing Daz 3D Studio content ,

Photo salvages:

Droplet, Bellis Daisy, Baby Blue Flowers, version 1, version 2, 2-Spot Ladybug, version 1, version 2, Bridge Over River Kennet

Coloring Tutorials & Mini-tutorials:

Zen colouring #43, Zen colouring #39, Zen colouring #38, Zen colouring #37, Zen colouring #36, Zen colouring #35, Zen colouring #34, Zen colouring #33,

Butterfly Colouring #11, Butterfly Colouring #10

Destruction Island Night Magic, Birds Over Sunset Waves , Starry Happy Little Rock

Halloween Artwork:

2018 - Pumpkin Patch Harvest
2019 - Haunted Pumpkin House, Jack-o-Lantern Forest Cemetery, Shadow in a Misty Forest

Miscellaneous Artwork:

Painting Wooded Easter Eggs



Lori Svensen
author/designer at A'mara Books
photographer/graphic artist for Viking Visual
(Buy my work at RedBubble)
verified author on Goodreads
find me on Twitter
blogging on: Steem, Whaleshares, WeKu


Discord Link



0
0
0.000
6 comments
avatar

Wow, are the Anglo-Saxons trying to invade that bra? It looks like a fortress 😜

0
0
0.000
avatar

hahaha! That made me laugh.
He wants armor clothing, so, that's what he's going to get.
I have 7 other textures for him to choose from, so we'll see which he likes best. ;)

Thanks for stopping by!

0
0
0.000
avatar

Sure my pleasure. So you're working for DAZ? I'm always mulling the thought to give it another try. I did years ago and right after installing items Mac started acting up. Not 100% sure if it was related but after removing the software everything went back to normal.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I use Daz for all my book cover images. Every once in awhile, I hit on something that's a game changer for me. My other Daz 3D tutorial (listed above) was one of them - finding a mostly-fool-proof way to organize 3rd party content. But learning how to take a piece of clothing and make it "my own" has been another. Now, if I like the shape of the clothing (or any other prop, for that matter), I don't have to worry about it... I can fix it myself.

I've never used Daz on the Mac, so I can't comment there. I keep hoping they'll make Daz Linux-compatible because this is maybe the only program now which keeps me on Windows. I went "off" Macs due to their limited upgradability. I simply can't afford to buy new machines all the time. I loved my MacMini except for that fact. I did attempt an upgrade, but it was of limited success. I do play with the idea of making a Hackintosh at some point, but that would require me acquiring some newer install disks. I haven't bought OSX since tiger.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Oh wow, so you're not only a designer/artist but also have extended knowledge about computer technology. Hats off, that's pretty rare, usually it's either one or the other. I might have to look into DAZ 3d again and need to check their compatibility with Blender and ZBrush.
Nice chatting, have a great week!

0
0
0.000
avatar

My computer knowledge exceeds that of the designer/artist, but I'm trying! :-)
(I will post later a mini-tutorial on one of my latest pieces of art.)

Daz is completely compatible with Blender (though I've only just started learning that - and not very well yet.) I don't know about ZBrush, but I'm sure there's someone talking about it on the forums.

It's also worth double checking the Daz 3D website every two weeks as they have regular freebies. I picked up $460 worth of content today - for free. (Just double-check what required products are - though if it's a model that's required, it's worth getting anyway as those are frequently offered for free.)

The link for the freebies is:
https://www.daz3d.com/free-3d-models#filter_container

You can also often find freebies on Renderosity, ShareCG.com and MostDigitalCreations.

0
0
0.000