3d artist Marlon R. Nunez talked about the production of his 3d character Scarlet. He described the way he models the body, sculpts the face and clothes.
My name is Marlon R. Nunez and I am a Senior Character/Texture artist. I started working in the industry back in 2010 in Slightly Mad Studios, a video games company. Since then I have developed many games like Need for Speed: Shift 2, Project Cars, Ferrari Legends among other titles.
I also work as a freelancer in the advertisement industry but recently I started focusing on the 3D print industry, indeed Scarlet is just my 3rd piece I have created, but I hope to keep improving and able to create better pieces in the future.
For a character artist, that is the big question. It took me a while until I got comfortable sculpting bodies, even if I am aware that there is still a long way to go on my knowledge of human anatomy. The most important when creating humans is to keep it simple. For the heads I like to start from primitives, like spheres and cylinders. This way, I am able to focus more on the main shapes and volumes before moving into the anatomy and high-frequency detail.
For bodies, I use the Zbrush mannequin as the initial base. I will explain both during this tutorial.
To sum up, I would divide any character pipeline into 2 parts: main shape/anatomy/proportions and then accessories/high-frequency details.
I always start from Zbrush. In case of Scarlet I started using the Zbrush mannequin, the reason for this is to keep some proportions in place so I can focus on getting the main shape for the female body. After getting the proportions and anatomy right, I tend to use Zremesher or re-construct the topology for the body, so later I can pose it in 3ds Max with better deformation. Also having the right topology helps a lot to create the UVs (I use unfold 3D for it)
I use what I call “The method of the Spheres”. Any face can be broken into primitives and working with those make it easier to get it right faster. In terms of facial expression, it is very important to gather enough references online. Nevertheless, if the initial head anatomy is right, getting the facial expressions is a piece of cake.
I like to pose the characters inside 3DsMax. As I explained before, after getting the anatomy and proportions I create the topology of the mesh. Exporting the first level to Max [3ds Max] and skin it to the default CAT skeleton, allows me to create and store several poses on the character so later on I can decide which one to go for.
When presenting a model it is very important to focus on dynamism. Every character has a background, specially when we are talking about superheroes. So it is important to make sure that the silhouette and pose are dynamic, to be able to show better its personality.
I use V-ray as my render engine. In case of Scarlet, the skin material is a VrayBlend material with VraySSSFast2 on top and with a VrayMaterial for specularity. For the clothing I used a VrayMaterial using VrayDirt node to help to create different color variations based on the Ambient Occlusion.
I use the displacement maps from Texturing.xyz to create the high frecuency details. Those maps should be painted inside of MARI on top of the face mesh and later on implemented inside Zbrush using the displacement funtion. Is very important to work with layers so I can increase and decrease the level of detail depending on the character. Also is helpful in case I work out different face expressions, so I can re-use same high frecuency maps exported from MARI.
For better understanding I recommend the tutorial I wrote for TexturingXYZ.
I used Marvelous Designer for Scarlet. Even if it is supposed to be comic style, I like to give more realism to the character and Marvelous Designer does a great job in creating realistic clothing. After creating the clothes there is always an extra step inside Zbrush for the clean-up and sometimes improving the shapes and wrinkles, but most of the work is done already in Marvelous.
Interview conducted by Kirill Tokarev.