Yes good textures for the win! I hate, hate, when creators release a wonderful mesh of an object but the texture is all blury or when you recolor it the pattern is stretched and doesn't look right. This looks very well done.
I also agree with Anon #1. I haven't tried making objects for Sims 3 so I don't know exactly how it works, but unless uv mapping TS3 objects is radically different from mapping TS2 ones, I don't understand why so many creators can't seem to do it right. Kudos to this creator for actually taking the time to finish their stuff. It looks very nice.
I'd say Arts & Crafts/Mission, myself, but I'm an art history geek. It was influenced by Shaker furniture and it occurred just before the Victoria era so your guess isn't far off.
Nice, proper texture maps ftw.
ReplyDeleteWow, you can see the detail in this piece of work!
ReplyDeleteGood Job WL!
Nice texture and detail - I like it.
ReplyDeleteI agree with anon #1- there's so many decent, nicely modeled pieces of furniture that I've just deleted because it textures blurrily or poorly.
ReplyDeleteThis looks perfect.
Ah, good ol MTS : )
ReplyDeleteYes good textures for the win! I hate, hate, when creators release a wonderful mesh of an object but the texture is all blury or when you recolor it the pattern is stretched and doesn't look right. This looks very well done.
ReplyDeleteI also agree with Anon #1. I haven't tried making objects for Sims 3 so I don't know exactly how it works, but unless uv mapping TS3 objects is radically different from mapping TS2 ones, I don't understand why so many creators can't seem to do it right. Kudos to this creator for actually taking the time to finish their stuff. It looks very nice.
ReplyDeleteVictorian? No ... perhaps Shaker style. It's nice though.
ReplyDeleteI'd say Arts & Crafts/Mission, myself, but I'm an art history geek. It was influenced by Shaker furniture and it occurred just before the Victoria era so your guess isn't far off.
ReplyDelete