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Low Poly 3D Modeling in Blender

You're reading from   Low Poly 3D Modeling in Blender Kickstart your career as a 3D artist by learning how to create low poly assets and scenes from scratch

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803245478
Length 318 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Samuel Sullins Samuel Sullins
Author Profile Icon Samuel Sullins
Samuel Sullins
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1:Getting Started with Low Poly Modeling
2. Chapter 1: Getting Familiar with Blender FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Understanding Low Poly Modeling 4. Chapter 3: Creating a Low Poly Tree 5. Part 2:Modeling and Shading for Low Poly
6. Chapter 4: Exploring Modifiers 7. Chapter 5: Creating Low Poly Mushrooms 8. Chapter 6: Understanding Materials and Shading 9. Part 3:Creating Your Own Assets
10. Chapter 7: Creating a Low Poly Tractor 11. Chapter 8: Low Poly Environment Modeling 12. Chapter 9: Modeling a Kangaroo 13. Chapter 10: Creating Low Poly Houses and Buildings 14. Chapter 11: Using the Asset Browser 15. Part 4:Building a Complete Low Poly Scene
16. Chapter 12: Blocking Out the Scene 17. Chapter 13: Building the Scene 18. Chapter 14: The Big Render 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Creating concept art

Concept art can be almost anything. Crude sketches, fancy hand-drawn images, photos, photoshopped messes, and even simple 3D setups using cubes. Anything. All it must do is give you a general idea of what your scene is going to look like and what you want your final render to look like.

Why bother with concept art?

The idea behind concept art is that you can test out your ideas – any ideas that you want – with much less effort than actually doing it in Blender. It also gives you a good general idea of how you want your scene to look – some concept art might help you figure out what mood, colors, and more you’re going for.

Every major movie, every TV series, and every video game makes heavy use of concept art to figure out what things look like before they’re made. There’s people who create concept art for a living. That’s their job. In bigger studios, 3D artists don’t have to worry about concept art...

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