44 chapter 2 ■ Sculpting in ZBrush
On the book’s DVD you’ll find a selection of custom brushes, including this one, called
softSmooth. Experiment with these brushes and make your own. After getting some experi-
ence with the ZBrush toolset and customizing some brushes, you can build a personal library
of brushes. Follow these steps to create and save your own custom brush:
- Select the Smooth brush from the Brush palette. Set BrushMod to 0 and click the Clone
button. This creates a copy of the Smooth brush that we can alter rather than replacing
the brush. - At the top of the Brush menu is the Curve submenu. Open this and while holding the
Shift key alter the curve to look like Figure 2.13. When you press Shift, the Brush
Curve will convert itself to the Smooth Curve.
This ensures the brush will be weaker at its center of influence than the default
Smooth. The far-left point represents the strength of the brush at the outermost ring;
the right point represents the strength at the center of the brush. Try this brush on a
surface. Notice how the effect is much softer and less destructive. - To save this brush, click Save As and name the new brush softSmooth. If you save
in Zbrush4/Zstartup/brushPresets, the brush will be available each time you start
ZBrush. The Brush Manager will also save any alpha and stroke settings when you
save the brush.
If you want this brush in the Lightbox instead, save it to Pixologic → ZBrush4 →
ZBrushes. This causes ZBrush to load the brush into the program without cluttering
the brush menu with it. You can easily access it in Lightbox whenever needed.
The Clay Brushes
ZBrush 3 includes several brushes designed to take advantage of the ability to interactively
sculpt millions of polygons. These brushes work on the highest subdivision levels of the
ZTool; I call them the Clay brushes. They include Clay, Claytubes, Snakehook, and Rake,
as well as several brushes that are variations, such as Mallet, Slash, and Gouge.
The Clay brushes are designed to take advantage of the capability to manipulate millions
of polygons in real time. Unlike the Standard, Inflate, and Layer brushes, the Clay brushes
function best when the mesh is at a higher subdivision level. These brushes add material in
a loose organic stroke, which feels like actual clay.
Figure 2.14 shows the difference in the same stroke on
a low poly sphere and a higher subdivided one. The
sphere on the left is 8,000 faces while the one on the
right is 2 million. ZBrush will allow you to subdivide
any mesh to a level that the current machine can handle
based on how much physical RAM is installed. In
Chapter 3, “Designing a Character Bust,” we’ll discuss
base meshes and optimizing for ZBrush in more detail.
The Rake tools in ZBrush are based on a type of
real-world sculpting tool. In clay sculpting, rakes are
small, serrated blades that are used to scrape down
clay at levels determined by how sharp and deep the
teeth are (Figure 2.15). Rakes allow the sculptor to
rough in forms in a loose manner, then refine them
Figure 2.13
Modify the
Smooth Curve
to look like
this to create
our custom
softSmooth
brush.
Figure 2.14 Claytubes and rakes on both a low-res and a
high-res mesh. Notice the increased fidelity of the brush
effect on the higher-resolution mesh.