Tutorials:CAS Creation From Start-To-Finish - Meshing

From SimsWiki
Revision as of 05:17, 6 August 2011 by Daluved1 (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search
CAS Creation With Daluved1: From Start-To-Finish

Planning | Meshing | Creating A New Package | Texturing | Finishing Up | Glossary

Contents

Meshing

We can technically make our Hello Kitty shirt using the already existing EA t-shirt. But what fun is that?! You are most likely reading this tutorial to learn how to really create custom clothing, and making you own meshes adds an extra kick to your creation!

Extracting Meshes

Daltut-findacaspaprt.jpg
So now that we've decided which CAS part we are going to clone, it's time to extract some base meshes to build our custom mesh off of. Click Extract Meshes just under the CAS parameters. A window asking where to save your meshes will pop up. Choose whatever destination folder you want to save your work files in and click "Okay". You may now close CTU for now.

I highly recommend you make an independent file for all of your project work files, as CAS creation can get a little messy.

Importing Into Milkshape

Looking where ever you saved your files, you should now see four new files:
Daltut-simgeom.jpg

There are three SIMGEOM files and one VPXY file. You can discard the VPXY file as it is not used. The three .simgeom files are the three lod meshes of the shirt.


The word "lod" is an acronym that stands for level of detail. Lod 1 is the highest level of detail, where as lod 3 is the lowest. You will see lod 1 during normal - up close - gameplay. But when you are viewing sims from a distance or the game is still rendering sims, you will most likely see them in lod 2 or lod 3 form.


Scale/Move

Don't add/delete anything

Adjusting the UV Map

Whatever you do, do NOT create a new map.

Dem Bones

Get reference meshes, e.g. pants, skirts, dresses,etc.

Lods

Export

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
game select
Toolbox