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Sunday, 31 July 2011

25 High Quality Sites to Download Free PSD files

In this post we will present 25  high quality websites that we visited this past few weeks that includes freebies (.psd files) which you can download. Every web designer needs to check for some inspiration every now and then, sometimes it is much easier for web designers and creative folks to download a PSD file or a resource in order to have their creative juices overflowing again.

PSD files are very useful resources for learning purpose because you can see all the layers and also what
techniques have been used to create the work.

Free PSD files are the friend of all designers, as they can save time for seasoned designers who need a lightbox, pagination, social media icons or other elements to use in their designs, and they are useful learning resources for beginning designers who want to see how to design such elements for themselves.

Some of the listed websites will be well known, but you’ll be surprised that they provide free PSD files. I hope you will like this collection and find it useful.

CLICK EACH IMAGE TO ACCESS

1. 

Tutegate

2. 

Pixels Daily

3. 

FreebiesBooth

4. 

FreebiesPixels

5. 

The Finished Box

6. 

SwiftPSD

7. 

PSD Chest

8. 

Weeklyy

9. 

Pixelentity

10. 

Duckfiles

11. 

Victorsosea

12.

92five.net

13. 

Emrah Demirag

14. 

Premium Pixels

15. 

Derek Kohn Goodies

16. 

Webappsledger

17. 

Allur

18. 

Jose Pardilla

19. 

PSD Turtle

20. 

365PSD

21. 

PSD Home

22. 

Graphics Fuel

23. 

FreePSD Files

24. 

Download PSD

25. 

Designmoo

This was reblogged from http://www.icanbecreative.com/free-psd-websites.html 

Saturday, 30 July 2011

New Sun and HDRI tutorial

A new Sun and HDRI tutorial by Omar Estevez

Thursday, 28 July 2011

Tutorial: Sketchup to Max _ Rendered in Vray Max

One of our Filipino veteran tutorial writer Chen Lee Menes allowed us to share again his workflow from Google SketchUp to 3DMax, then rendering it with VrayMax.

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Vray4Cinema4D Site

This is a great SITE if you want to see the output of VrayCinema4D.

News: CgWorkshop Forum Winners announced

CgWorkshop Forum winners were announced. HERE is the link.

First Prize: Marina

Second Prize: Nilo Aleo

Third Prize:

Wednesday, 27 July 2011

Shaggy Carpet using Itoo Software Forest pack

Shag carpet using Forest Pack

I am re-blogging this entry from this SITE

First of all, let me relinquish any credit for this tip. The idea for this post was sparked by another BB, the famous Benjamin Brosdau, in a forum discussion on how to achieve the best-looking shag carpet (I’ve long been baffled by the realism of Ben’s carpets).
Ben suggested creating small fibre elements and scattering them on a high-res mesh using R&D Group’s MultiScatter – essentially the dominant workflow for grass these days. This post is about how I created the image below using another 3ds Max plugin, namely the excellent Forest Pack by Itoo Software.


The first step was to create the element to be scattered. Using splines and a bend modifier, I first modelled a few distinct carpet fibres. Then, I used the AdvancedPainter script to distribute these four or five strands into a small carpet patch (make sure you use the “copy” option in AdvancedPaint and not “instance”) and merged these strands into one small object.

You can model your own patch, indeed you should if you’re after a very special look. But for a quick test, you can download this patch for free from my TurboSquid model store.
The next step was to create the carpet’s base mesh. Mine was a cylinder with grooves, a few levels of Turbosmooth and a noise modifier for some randomness. Make sure your carpet is one-sided only – you don’t want to scatter fibres below it (well, no-one will notice if you do, but it would be a waste of resources, wouldn’t it).

The last step was to create the Forest Pack object by selecting the bald carpet as target object and the patch as the scatter object. Here are the settings for the image at the top. All settings not shown here were left at their default values. I used the Pro version of Forest Pack for this. You may be able to approximate the results with the free version, which only allows object to be scattered on flat surfaces.

This is a pretty basic setup, but as you can see, it works quite nicely and looks even better from a certain distance. Of course, this won’t be applicable to all sorts of carpets. Hair systems or image-based displacement may work better in some circumstances, but for the kinds of dense shag carpets you see in most furniture catalogues these days, it seems to be the best approach.

News: SketchUp in Spanish

Edgar Navas and Ivan Alvarado managed and created these two resource sites in Spanish dedicated to SketchUp. Sketchando.net is a site aimed to link and introduce to different SketchUp resources: tutorials, links, galleries etc.  The second one is a Spanish Forum.

You can go to Sketchando site direct by clicking this LINK 

Here is the FORUM LINK