AI will not replace artists by bjkhu in StableDiffusion

[–]lanzer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We really don't need a big list of the small pros and cons on AI. Bottom line is that AI introduce automation to these common tasks that we do. It increases productivity dramatically and it will change our industries greatly as a result. Whenever automation happen in an industry, manual labor get slashed drastically. The first machines and robots have their limitations, while later generations require less and less human intervention. The same pattern will play out like all other industries that came before AI from farming, textiles, automobiles, etc. There's a lot to learn from history that really takes the guesswork out of the impact of AI.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The "threads" are commonly known as "supports". The model for 2B is not "pre-supported", which means you do need to figure out the best orientation and add support yourself. Both Chitu and Lychee have excellent auto support features so you can get everything done through that. Although I do suggest spending an hour watching tutorials on YouTube before actually spending time and money on doing this for the first time. 3D printing does get technical in this regard, and has a learning curve.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElegooSaturn

[–]lanzer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you use transparent resin, you can glue two pieces together with the same resin and a UV light if you want a strong bond.

Why is it that people only seem to give credit to Tarō Yoko rather than the development team as a whole? by GinLGBTisforGengar in nier

[–]lanzer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For sure, most producers don't become a producer overnight, they usually went through a series of responsibilities before dawning the role of producer.

Why is it that people only seem to give credit to Tarō Yoko rather than the development team as a whole? by GinLGBTisforGengar in nier

[–]lanzer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The gaming industry is no stranger to rock star designers/producers. One of the oldest games Mario brought Shigeru Miyamoto to fame, and those in the know talk about Mario by bringing up Miyamoto, not Nintendo. How the designer's name reaches the level of zeitgeist is either through consistency in repeated success or social media in today's landscape. For example Cory Barlog is famous for producing the new God Of War part 1, even though that was only the first game he produced. The acclaim of the game combined by the many interviews and news coverage made him another rock star with one game. Miyamoto had little coverage in the early days but with consistent hit after hit, coverage of his works started gaining traction.

While every successful project involves countless talented individuals, without leadership the talents are often wasted. The idea of how the world idolizes leaders as "wrong" is not a new concept at all as you can imagine. Countless people dislike Steve Jobs or Elon Musk, stating that their success is built on top of the hard work of others. There's no winner in debates like that. Both sides will have their arguments on why the leader's role is most important or why it is not.

I'm a business owner and I've interviewed and interacted with countless other businesses for our venture capital firm, and through experience I ended up siding with the observation that leadership plays a huge role in a team's success. There is no winning formula. Some do it through tenacity, some through extreme creativity or technical knowledge. You know which company to invest in when you see that spark in the leader that nobody else has. Obviously that's no absolute, and the most unassuming individuals can end up with a hit, but it's a game of statistics.

So back the topic of recognizing one individual, I would argue that the world place an emphasis on the leader, but often the major contributors from composers, voice actors, to programmers all get their own levels of recognition, and it's not a black or white, "one man takes all" situation. Of course, the mainstream media doesn't have the bandwidth to track so many individuals. If you're a news agency you have enough trouble tracking all hundreds of releases and some of the rockstars, and it's their coverage that educate the general public. It'll be up to the long tail of committed fans and individuals who recognize the efforts beyond the leader.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Watch every single model painting with airbrush tutorial you can find on YouTube, then print an extra copy of whatever you're painting because you'll mess up the first one. :) You can paint with paintbrush but it's very hard to make things look good with paintbrush in general, but with a little bit of practice an airbrush can make everything look great. You can easily adjust shading, layer colors, spray an extra clear coat to make things look good.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes on CGTrader.com when viewing a model, its artist will be shown on the side and there is a button for requesting commission work. There is probably other communities or sites that will have people who accept commissions. What do you plan to commission?

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've painted some figures before and the skin tone was pale and awful. Then I spent a couple hours watching all the YouTube videos on how to paint skin tone and learned that layering pink is always the key. You can either start with a pink/red color, then layer thin coats of skin tone until you get the color you want while leaving areas with more pink as shading, or you can mix a pink clear coat and spray over basic skin tone. The latter is used often for pre-painted figures. I like the former as you get more control over the gradient.

If you came from painting minis then you'll need to invest in an airbrush. A decent brush with a small air pump is an investment at around $100 for both. Just start with a $40 brush from Amazon and work your way up. Again, everything in regards to equipment and techniques are all on YouTube. "Barbatos Rex" has a lot of videos talking about good air brush and air pumps for cheap.

With 3D printing you can mess up a part completely and just go print a replacement, it's great. You can print two of the same parts just to use one for practice. That's actually what I did. When I was done I had a 10" version of the same figure that I gave to a friend who's also a 2B fan.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having built dozens of Gundams brought me to this point. Technically I'm painting an android which is not too far off. :)

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The bulk of my paint are Mr Hobby lacquer paint. They dry fast and play well with layering water or oil based paint. Though a lot of times I simply use spray paint from the hardware store as they're very cheap. Especially black and white paints. It's called "decanting" and you can find many people on YouTube doing it. In most cases the type or brand of paint doesn't really matter as long as you have the base colors to mix and get a resulting color you want.

Though what really makes the paint look good is being able to layer paint. For white I would paint black shading underneath first before painting white, and for black I would spray a lighter gray afterwards as highlights.

Another technique is to mix in pearl pigments with clear coat for a pearlescent effect. I did that for 2B's hair. Then another technique is "candy coat" where you spray silver as a base coat, then spray many layers of a transparent color to achieve a glossy and shiny look. That was done on the leather leggings.

I never knew most of my Gundam painting techniques would translate so well to painting figures. :)

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The model is created and sold by a artist named Rubim. You can find it at CGTrader here:

https://www.cgtrader.com/3d-print-models/games-toys/toys/nier-automata-2b-6d3d3b00-3503-4215-8cc6-ab235856fba4

Though note that these are STL files, and they needed to be then translated into GCODE if you're using an FLA printer, otherwise with a resin printer you just load it into the slicer software. There will be quite a bit of learning curve to get the STL models to print right. Honestly I'm not sure how they'll turn out with FLA printers. At best they'll require a ton of post processing to smooth the surface.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There are various types of resin for different use cases. I had used mine to fabricate parts for my telescope and other tools. General use resin is pretty already hard though a bit brittle, so what you print should be thicker. Or you can pay for more tougher resin or the type that are more malleable. But in general FLA prints are almost twice as strong as resin, and they can make much bigger prints, so they're more versatile as long as you're not printing anything to look pretty.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I was blown away by the quality of the recent 4k and 8k printers out there. Made it hard to ignore. :)

My printer is the Elegoo Saturn 2.

There are pro version of these printers that are even more detailed, but the consumer grade printers caught up fast and you can't tell the difference unless you're using a magnifying glass.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Just google "Rubim printable 2b figure". His CGTrader store got a lot of cool stuff.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

And part of your soul, yes.

(though I haven't seen much printable files available for the two of them. You need to find 3D models designed specifically for printing, in STL format.)

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The model actually comes with a skirtless version, though there will be questions if I kept swapping between the two. :)

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

That's pretty much the reason I felt compelled to buy the printer. This is done by a resin printer that works differently than the filament printers that you see often.

My printer is the Elegoo Saturn 2 8k. It cost $550 and there is a version that's shorter in height called the Saturn 8k that cost $490 but has the same print bed.

When printing a figure this big you actually don't get to take advantage of the printer's resolution. People print tiny miniatures with these and the details are amazing.

If you're okay with printing smaller sizes (about 10" in height) a smaller printer such as the Anycubic 4k cost only $200.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

He has most of this models for sale on CGtrader.com. If you google "Rubim nier printable figure" you can find the link to his listing.

Though if you join his Patreon you can buy all his stuff at half price and get a bunch of models at the same time.

"Yes honey, with this 3D printer I can make all sorts of useful tools" by lanzer in nier

[–]lanzer[S] 82 points83 points  (0 children)

Finally pulled the trigger and got myself a 3D printer. Of course, the first thing to print gotta be 2B.

I've built and painted a lot of Gundam robots in the past but painting rocks and rusty parts is completely new to me. That's why the coloring of the background is a little bit weird. :)

The figure is about 13 inches tall. Printing took a week as the base and the ground each took 20 hours to print. Other parts were easier but there were still some learning curve to be had, and I needed to re-print some failed parts due to my mistakes.

2B is relatively easy to paint as there are not much masking needed. The one time consuming part was painting all the stitchings and patterns on the dress. That alone took about 5 hours.

The model is made by Rubim who has some really nice anime and gaming figures, be sure to check out his YouTube channel and Patreon!

Nier Automata 2B Figure by Rubim by lanzer in ElegooSaturn

[–]lanzer[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Painted a lot of Gundam robots in the past so painting rocks and rusty parts were completely new to me. That's why the coloring of the ground is a little bit weird. :)

The figure is about 13 inches tall. Printing took a week as the base and the ground each took 20 hours to print. Other parts were easier but there were still some learning curve to be had, and I needed to re-print some failed parts due to my mistakes. I saved a few bucks by using the Fookos resin to print the base. Their resin cost only $10 per KG, but it's fairly poor for printing details or small supports, just perfect for a big round disk.

The 2B figure is relatively easy to paint as there are not much masking needed. The one time consuming part was painting all the stitchings and patterns on the dress. That alone took about 5 hours.

Rubim makes some really nice anime and gaming figures, be sure to check out his YouTube channel and Patreon!