There’s also a 2D overlay grid available for checking proportions. Light intensity and direction, as well as ambient light can be adjusted through viewport buttons. Presets exist for default views and there are tools to quickly frame the model in the viewport, in case you’ve lost focus on it. Mouse and keyboard navigation can also be customized, in similar manner to Mudbox and ZBrush, so that you can adjust the viewport navigation and other buttons to mimic those of other apps you are using. Most of the UI is customizable, layouts can be saved and restored. Overall the feel of 3D-Coat is pretty snappy and fast, all selections, viewport navigation, etc., are quick and responsive. When you get over these UI oddities, however, the interface enables you to handle different tasks quickly. When you click buttons to access different modes, the model shows up in certain rooms and not others depending on its type (voxel model or low-res polygonal mesh). For example, if you wanted to import a hi-res mesh and start retopologizing it, it’s not immediately obvious how to do it. Initially it’s hard to figure out how one should do certain things. Pressing a mode tab changes the UI with one mouse click, in similar fashion to Maya or Softimage. The different workspace modes can be accessed via tabs located on the top part of the 3D-Coat window. Model by Olli Sorjonen, created entirely in 3D-Coat. The Render room, finally, shows both meshes and voxel models.ģD-Coat’s interface, Voxels room displayed. In the case of the Retopo room, voxel models show up there as a reference mesh, which you can use as a model to build new geometry on. The software is basically split into two logical parts: Paint, Sculpt and UV “rooms” (for working with meshes), and Voxels and Retopo “rooms” (for working with hires voxel models). There are different workspace modes, called “rooms”, for approaching the different tasks: Paint, Sculpt, Retopo, UV, Voxels and Render. When starting 3D-Coat the user is greeted with a gray user interface and a menu with various options, which helps a lot when taking your first steps in the application, as some of the panels and tools are full of options and their purpose may not be immediately obvious. All models were made by Olli and Sami Sorjonen. Note: among the images accompanying this article, only the models that explicitly state so were created 100% with 3D-Coat. The version reviewed is the third major installment of the software, with features that bring it closer to a bigger professional audience, steering away from the niche software corner. 3D-Coat is being developed as cross platform software for 32-bit and 64-bit Windows, Apple OSX and Linux, and currently supports 8 different languages, which might be a plus for non-English speakers. It can utilize 3DConnexion’s space navigator controller and pressure sensitive tablets like Wacom. The software supports CUDA acceleration provided by NVIDIA GPU cards. 3D-Coat is a voxel sculpting software developed by Ukraine-based Pilgway, that aims to make it possible to sculpt without any topological constraints, while providing at the same time a comprehensive toolset for UV mapping, painting textures and retopologization.
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