The Making of 'Zelda' by Alberto Maciel

Alberto Maciel - The Making of Zelda

When you have a very strong passion for something, but you are limited in your resources, you get very creative to live up to it. So did Alberto Maciel, he is the best example of a self-taught 3D artist with creative ways to learn. He found ways to follow his spirit and made it to be a very talented 3D artist and successful 3ds Max instructor.

In the following making-of, he gives very useful tips and explains why he is not a fan of post-production. Welcome Alberto, we are excited to hear what you have to say.

About me

Hi, my name is Alberto Maciel. I'm a 3D artist originally from Brazil but currently living in Tampa, Florida. I was interested in computer graphics from an early age. In 2004, I started to venture into Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, because of magazines I bought at the neighborhood store. I started in the digital world by making vectors and montages in Photoshop. I spent so much time doing this that soon 2D lost its fun for me and I started to venture into 3D.

In 2006, I was already immersed in 3D. My dream initially was to be a digital artist at Pixar but the character and animation business in my country was extremely limited. My access to study content also prevented me from studying because I only had access to the internet on weekends and the content was not found as it is today. These limitations made me shift my attention and focus to a developing market in Brazil: Archviz.

In 2018, at the age of 18, I started working at Autodesk Brazil as a 3ds Max instructor and since then, I haven't done anything else with my life and I intend to continue following my passion every day. I'm so addicted to 3D that when I'm bored, I do modeling and scenes just for the fun of doing them. In the places where I worked, they called me '3D-Addict'.

Design and computer graphics have always been present in my life and I've done many, many projects for free, just out of passion. I live design just like a singer lives music. I can not imagine my life without it.

I'm in the archviz field for 14 years now and I'm currently leaving Brazil to study in Florida. My main software are 3ds Max and Corona Render for archviz and I have a bit distinguished methodology of creating 3D where I'm almost against post-production. Everything you see in my scenes is pure 3D, directly from the frame buffer. I try to avoid post-production because I believe it's a destructive workflow and it closes the doors (or makes it harder) to do animations on the scene afterwards.

In this breakdown, I'm going to share some techniques I use in my visualizations and some of my thinking methodology.

The soul of the project

Connecting myself with the project is what makes me want to evolve and be better every day. From the moment we do things just out of obligation, we lose passion for it and we stop evolving. So from time to time, I create projects that have a story to tell, that means something to me, that I feel connected to, and keep the flame burning. And usually, those are the ones that result in the best images. So, GIVE MEANING TO YOUR PROJECTS! Make sure to tell a story and transmit feelings.

Details of the table from the Zelda rendering

Preparation and references

One of the most important things for the development of a project is to have good references. Real-world references and real photos mostly. I see many projects where the rendering quality is not very good but the whole ambiance, the mood, and the colors, talk to each other and have such a great harmony that the final render becomes a beautiful piece of art, despite some limitations. The same way I see extremely composite renders, with thousands of objects, many things happening at the same time, and at the end of the day nothing talks to each other and there is no connection. It ends up being a beautiful render but also an empty shell.

So, accumulating information and references, helps you stay on the initial idea, in the ideal mood, and balance the project as a whole. It is also at this stage where I define the color palette that will be used in the project.

Board with references for the Zelda rendering

Modeling

Despite keeping things simple here, I'm very picky about modeling everything I use in my scenes. Sometimes, when I have to use specific models of some brand and they provide the 3D model but the modeling is with a bad topology, I simply re-model it from scratch, maintaining a beautiful and acceptable edge-flow because although it may not make much difference in the final image, a project with topology correcting is much healthier and makes rendering calculations much easier.

Remodelled table for the Zelda rendering

The environment itself is nothing special, just boxes for the walls and a large side window as the main light input. As the objective of this project was to focus on the environment around the sofa with a more artistic approach, the rest of the scene did not need to be modeled. Usually, I model the outside in 3D, using 3D trees, buildings, etc. rather than images of plants, but in this particular project, as the windows would be condensed with water and splashes, it would be a vain effort and waste of work and time to put all the trees outside the window. That's why I chose plants with an image.

Creating the outside for Zelda

For the rug, I decided to use an older method (Thanks, BBB3viz), in which I use ForestPack to spread a patch of model hairs all over the rug area. Using this method, I have more control of all aspects of the strands. Often you will need to eliminate the geometries in ForestPack, that are on top of the rug, so that the threads do not go through the mesh of the objects that are on top of it.

Creating rug fur with ForestPack

For strands, hair, and fur simulations, I always choose to use Ornatrix. It is a powerful hair creation plugin that replaces the old and archaic Native Hair&Fur. Ornatrix requires a fair amount of study and trial & error to understand how it works, but in the end, it's worth it.

Creating further fur a pillow and blanket

Details of the fur on the blanket

The steam is also done in 3D (PhoenixFD plugin). I avoid post-production as much as possible, as I believe it is a destructive workflow that closes many doors to the possibility of creating an animation, for example. If you do everything within the 3D software, it will be much easier to create an animation, because the final result will be right there, in the virtual frame buffer!

Details of the steam

Textures / Materials

With the ease we have nowadays of getting models for everything anywhere, in my view, texturing and materials are where you can still really shine and do something different. In each scene, each lighting behaves in a different way, and according to the story you want to tell through your project, the materials take a big responsibility here. This is probably the stage I spend most time on. No surface is perfect in the real world and as we can't convey all the micro details in modeling, this function is at the expense of materials and textures. For each close-up, I take special time to add surface imperfections to the materials, such as scratches, wear, water droplets, and dirt, which initially don't seem to make much of a difference. But in a general context, they add a lot of value to the final result of the scene.

Details of the floor with leaves

Here is a specific breakdown of the wooden floor, where I use a composite node to have control over each aspect of the material, as the composition often behaves in a unique and different way for roughness, displacement, bump and diffuse. Each has unique features and the more you explore each one, the more unique results you will get.

Creation of a natural wooden floor

As I referred earlier to project references, I do the same for material references. Many of the materials we use are around us. Instead of looking for images on the internet, step away from the screen and take a look at the concrete below or next to you, extract the materials yourself, touch, and feel how the relief behaves, and how it reacts to light. As I mentioned initially, I didn't have internet access at the beginning of my career, so I had to extract the materials myself, taking pictures with 1080p digital cameras, or pay to use the scanner from the neighborhood store, to scan a leaf from a tree and extract the texture. As I am old-school, I still use this methodology of extracting my own materials whenever possible. I avoid using ready-made materials as much as possible because by extracting it myself, I learn how the material should behave.

Details of a leave

Here is an example of the Zelda sofa material, for which I didn't have anything similar in my personal library, so I looked around and saw that my dog's bed resembled a lot of the sofa's references.

Creating the sofa material

With her permission, I photographed her bed fur, processed the maps, extracted displacement, bump, normal and albedo and VOILÀ.

Lighting

There's not much of a secret here, because of the advanced technology we have today, everything is calculated the way it should be.

I always try to use the lights in exactly the same way we use them in the real world. I use lights only where they would be in real life, with no additions to black planes to absorb light or additional invisible lights to highlight reflections. For general lighting, I start with an HDR on the environment map but if I need more control of the angle of the lights, colors, softness, etc, I use CoronaSun+Sky. In this scene, only two lights were used. HDR + the lampshade light. I always use a CoronaColorCorrect node to control the exposure, gamma, and saturation of the HDR map, and in this scene an overcast image was used.

Using Corona Bitmap for lighting

Composition

Placing your cameras and objects in advantageous positions will give you extra realism. Using the ImageCompHelper script, I align the items I want to give more relevance, drawing the eye to them. Also always move objects, drag, and place things between the camera and the subject to give the feeling of depth, as I did here with the coffee table.

Placing the components in the scene

Placing the table in the scene

Post-Production

Post-production is very simple: I open my image editor, put a PNG of my signature and that's it! It's done. I don't use post-production on any of my images. I like to leave post-production as a last resort.

I hope this breakdown has helped you in some way. It was a pleasure to share with you some of my processes and methodology.

If there are any questions about anything related to it, don't hesitate to contact me! I will be happy to answer your questions.

To keep up with Alberto and his work and maybe also to ask him questions, check his profiles on the following channels:

Web

ArtStation

Instagram


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