![]() ![]() You can scroll with the mouse wheel to change size of the brush. It’s nicer to use those without much falloff to this task since we want the transition between painted area and bare metal to be sharp. I will select hard looking alpha from the Alphas panel, and start to chip away the paint. I like to chip some parts of the paint so that it looks less uniform and more organic. Now we can further tweak the paint layer. And again I will right click our PaintLayer and select Fill Whole Model. I’m going to give this Smart Material a new name, and hit Save as New. I like extreme effect so I am going to choose something around 5 or 6. This will allow to change strength of the Curvature Map, which means that you can choose how strongly you want the worn-edges effect to appear. We have plenty of options here, but I’d like to focus in Overall Cavity Modulator. Smart material editor in 3D Coat is easy to use. So I will right click the smart material I chose, and select Smart Material Editor. This effect is based on the Curvature Map that is automatically generated for you. Now, I’d like to edit the curvature effect more. Now, we can again use magnifying glass button in Preview options to get a nice scale of the effect. Again, use Smart Material Preview to get an idea how it will look like. I’m going to choose this beige one which I created myself. We can go to paints in Smart Materials tab and pick the one we like. ![]() Let’s Add a new layer by clicking the button of the lower right of Layers panel. You have just PBR textured a metal asset. We can preview and check our object in full PBR glory. Then, let’s double click this layer and rename it to BaseMetal. We can now right click Layer 1 and choose option “Fill whole layer”.
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