Awesome, thank you so much! Thinking back about all the times, when I was fiddling with some ready-made ivy assets, trying to make them fit to my needs... Never again - now I will simply use TyFlow. Btw, on a house facade - how much can you control the spread? Also, is it possible to 'exclude' certain areas (like windows and doors, for example)?
Hi and thank you very much for watching. Very glad to hear that you find it useful and I'm very greatful for your great feedback. Regarding your question: You can control the spread as much as you want. There are no limits actually. Just make sure that you always use one single Model (Surface) per tyFLOW setup since adding multiple objects in the same Event will slow down the entire process and also make it harde to control. If you are working on complex buildings where you have to avoid the ivy growth in certain areas, you better prepare your model in a way, that all the parts (those you want to grow ivy on and those that you don't want) are seperated. Create one tyFLOW setup per object (surface) wou want to grow ivy on and control each of them seperatelly. That would be the best way to avoid that in my opinion. Hopefully these inputs are useful to you. Thanks again and keep on rocking .. Cheers
Very cool! Thank you for the showcase, it's also interesting to see you using Vantage as realtime preview.
You are very welcome .. Thank you too for watching. Am a huge fan of VANTAGE. Its like Unreal Engine but for 3Ds Max for Real-Time rendering .. Cheers
Awesome, thank you so much! Thinking back about all the times, when I was fiddling with some ready-made ivy assets, trying to make them fit to my needs... Never again - now I will simply use TyFlow.
Btw, on a house facade - how much can you control the spread? Also, is it possible to 'exclude' certain areas (like windows and doors, for example)?
Hi and thank you very much for watching. Very glad to hear that you find it useful and I'm very greatful for your great feedback.
Regarding your question:
You can control the spread as much as you want. There are no limits actually. Just make sure that you always use one single Model (Surface) per tyFLOW setup since adding multiple objects in the same Event will slow down the entire process and also make it harde to control.
If you are working on complex buildings where you have to avoid the ivy growth in certain areas, you better prepare your model in a way, that all the parts (those you want to grow ivy on and those that you don't want) are seperated.
Create one tyFLOW setup per object (surface) wou want to grow ivy on and control each of them seperatelly.
That would be the best way to avoid that in my opinion. Hopefully these inputs are useful to you.
Thanks again and keep on rocking .. Cheers