Create photorealistic 3D female portraits with ease with this
step-by-step guide from character artist Mao-Lin Liao.
Making a realistic female portrait has always been something
that was at the top of my to-do list. It's going be a long journey, and
doing it properly is always going to require a lot of time and
patience. Although this final image is not 100 per cent photorealism, it's a decent attempt.
Keep in mind that it's hard to work on something that
everyone is so familiar with. The pitfalls of working on a photoreal
face are that you can become blinded by your mistakes when spending so
many hours on the details. One of the tricks that really helps me is to
keep a small mirror at my desk to check any flaws and reset the image in
my mind. When you have worked for long periods on a project, it can
make your mistakes hard to spot.
Our brains simply filter all that information away and we
begin to fill in the gaps and see what isn't there. To train myself to
observe my work more objectively, I often use Lightroom or a real mirror
to flip the image, and then scale it down to thumbnail size. This helps
me to filter out the large amount of detail in the face and lets me
focus on composition, and whether it looks realistic or not. Here's my
step-by-step process to creating the perfect portrait.
01. Preparing the model
Before adding details, separate facial features to quickly
isolate and work on the detail. Prepare your model by unpacking the UVs,
then apply Auto Groups With UV in ZBrush. Now you're ready to sculpt
without the extra step of drawing a mask to refine the sculpting area.
This is not the final UV layout for texturing but a quick way to
navigate through your mesh.
02. Skin shading
Arnold Skin Shader is an excellent skin shader, and works
best in real world units. Tweak the basic parameters like SSS Radius
Multiplier to get the desired subscatter effect. The default is 10, but I
found it a bit waxy for my model. A young female has slightly more
subcutaneous fat compared with a male, so I use a value of 5 for female
and 4 for male characters.
Advertisement
03. Hair and grooming
To keep hair manageable, we need to split the FiberMesh into
clumps to select them later. Switch to PolyFrame mode, and [Ctrl]+drag
on half of the hair to create a mask. Go to Mask>Polygroup>Groups
to create a Polygroup base on your mask. Try to work symmetrically and
split everything into eight equal chunks. Eight parts is a good start,
as we can always add more.
04. Portrait lighting
My goal was not to make it look like a perfect beauty shoot
with typical studio softbox lighting. My main light source was a HDR
image from a room with bright windows, which gives the image's base
lighting natural reflection and highlights in the eyes. It simulates
colour bleeding of the environment that really helps to integrate her
into the background.
No comments:
Post a Comment