3D Paint Tool
 
 
 

Lets you use the 3D Paint Tool to paint in 3D space. For more information, see Paint textures on 3D objects.

3D Paint Tool settings

The following sections describe the settings for the 3D Paint Tool in the Tool Settings Editor.

Brush section

Define the brush profile (or shape) using the settings in this section.

Radius (U) (Artisan)

Displays when an Artisan brush is selected. If you are using a stylus and have Radius or Both selected for the Pressure Mapping, set the upper or maximum possible radius for the brush. No matter how hard you press the stylus, the brush radius will not exceed this radius. If you are not using a stylus, this setting defines the radius for the brush.

Radius (L) (Artisan)

Displays when an Artisan brush is selected. If you are using a stylus, set the lowest or smallest possible radius for the brush when pressure is applied to the stylus. If you are not using a stylus, this setting is not used.

Scale (PFX)

Displays when a Paint Effects brush is selected. This setting corresponds with the Paint Effects Global Scale setting, which adjusts the brush attribute values by a common factor. This scales the paint effect uniformly so you can paint the same effect, but in different sizes.

Width (PFX)

Displays when a Paint Effects brush is selected. This setting corresponds with the Paint Effects Brush Width setting, which defines the width of the brush in Maya working units.

Artisan

Select which Artisan brush profile to use when the Paint Operations is Paint, Erase, or Clone. Artisan profiles are defined by grayscale images. You can select from 40 predefined brushes in your mayapath/Maya/Contents/brushShapes (Mac OS X) or mayapath/brushShapes (Windows and Linux) directory, including the following four common ones.

You can create your own shapes using any file format supported by Maya. Maya uses the luminance values of the image and scales the image to 256x256.

To select an image, click the Browse button, select the shape and click Open. Adjust the Stamp Spacing to get the effect you want when you paint.

To select the last opened image, click the icon to the left of the Browse button. If you select an image file provided with Maya in the brushShapes directory, this icon changes to show what the shape is.

Paint Effects

Select which Paint Effects brush you want to paint with when the Paint Operation is Paint, Smear, or Blur. Paint Effects brushes are defined by specific combinations of attribute settings and can be simple (like pen, pastel, oil paint, and pencil brushes) or they can simulate growth to get their look (like flowers, feathers, hair, and fire brushes).

Click the Last Brush button to pick the last selected Paint Effects brush. The Paint Operation changes to Paint, Smear, or Blur, depending on the Brush Type defined for the last selected brush preset.

Click the Edit Template Brush button to open the Paint Effects Brush Settings window for the selected brush. Any changes you make to these settings are applied to your next Paint Effects stroke.

Click the Get Brush button to open Visor where you can select a Paint Effects brush. When you select a brush, the Paint Operation changes to Paint, Smear, or Blur, depending on the Brush Type defined for the brush preset. (Paint Effects Erase is not supported in 3D Paint.)

Rotate To Stroke

Determines the alignment of brush shapes that are not uniformly round. Turn this option on to align the stamp shape relative to the direction you move the brush. Turn this option off to align the stamp shape relative to the up vector. The stamp shape retains its orientation when you change the view.

Color section

Use the settings in this section to define the brush color and opacity.

Color

Click the Color box to open the Color Chooser and select the color you want to paint with. If you select a Paint Effects brush, this color represents the Paint Effects Color1 setting. For details on using the Color Chooser, see the Basics guide. Use the Color value slider to change the color value (from 0 to 1).

Opacity

Set the fraction of the Color value to apply to each brush stamp within a stroke. Values build up when stamps overlap. Stamps overlap when you paint over the same area. Using the Opacity setting, you can produce more gradual changes to achieve more subtle effects. When you set Opacity to 0, your brush stroke has no effect. Opacity has no effect on Paint Effects brushes.

Flood section

Use the settings in this section to define the color and opacity to flood the texture with the set color or to erase.

Color

Click the Color Value box to open the Color Chooser and select the color you want to flood with.

Opacity

Set the fraction of the Color value to apply to apply when you flood. Opacity has no effect on Paint Effects brushes.

Flood Paint

Click this button to flood paint the set color.

Flood Erase

Click this button to erase as either Flood All or Flood Selected Faces.

Flood

Set one of the following options:

All

Floods the entire texture with the Color value and the Opacity value. You can only flood the surface when the Paint Operation is set to Paint or Erase. When you flood Erase, the texture is restored to its last saved version.

Selected Faces

Floods only the selected faces of the polygon or subdivision surface with the Color value and Opacity value. You must exit the 3D Paint Tool to select the faces.

Paint Operations section

Select the paint operation and blend mode want to use.

Artisan

Select one of the following Artisan brush operations. Maya uses the last Artisan brush profile selected for that operation. However, if the last profile was a custom profile, Maya remembers only that it was a custom brush, not which custom brush. This means that changing the custom brush for one operation changes it for any other operation with the custom brush profile selected.

Paint

Applies paint to the surface according to the defined settings.

Erase

Removes the color from the painted pixels, revealing the last saved texture. To set the background texture to erase to, turn off Update on Stroke and click the Save Textures button. Flooding with the operation set to Erase restores the texture to its last saved version. See Erase paint

Clone

Clones a sample of the paint already applied to the surface. You can then paint that sample elsewhere on the surface or on other surfaces. You cannot flood with the operation set to Clone. See Clone paint.

Paint Effects

Select one of the following Paint Effects brush operations. When you select a Paint Effects brush from Visor or your shelves, the 3D Paint Tool automatically sets the operation to correspond with the Brush Type setting of the brush. (Brushes with an Erase brush type are not supported by the 3D Paint Tool.)

The 3D Paint Tool uses the last Paint Effects brush selected for that operation. If no Paint brush was previously selected, the default Paint Effects paint brush for that operation is used.

Paint

Applies paint to the surface according to the defined settings for the selected Paint Effects brush. Maya uses the Flood Color when you flood with Paint Effects Paint selected.

Smear

Blends adjacent colors together along the stroke path. You cannot flood with the operation set to Smear.

Blur

Blurring with a Paint Effects brush softens the edges of adjacent colors by averaging their color values. You control the blur using the Blur Intensity slider. You cannot flood with the operation set to Blur.

All brush types use the shape defined by the brush attributes. For example, if you paint over a stroke with a Blur brush that has tubes, blurring occurs where the tubes cross over the paint, not along the Blur stroke path.

For more information about Paint Effects brushes, see the Paint Effects section in this book.

Set Erase Image

Click this button so you can set the current paint layer as what to erase back to.

Reset Brushes

Click Reset Brushes to restore the Artisan brush profile for each operation to the default (Soft Brush Profile, softBrush.jpg), and to restore the Paint Effects brush settings for each operation to the default for that operation.

Blend Mode

Select how you want to alter the way paint is applied to the texture. These blend modes are a subset of those available in popular paint packages. The base color is the color you are painting on.

NoteBlend Modes are used only when the brush is an Artisan brush.
Default

Paints each pixel to make it the resulting color. This is the default mode.

Lighten

Uses the base or paint color, whichever is lighter, as the resulting color. Replaces pixels darker than the paint color, and leaves pixels lighter than the paint color unchanged.

Darken

Uses the base or paint color, whichever is darker, as the resulting color. Replaces pixels lighter than the paint color, and leaves pixels darker that the paint color unchanged.

Multiply

Multiplies the base color by the paint color. The resulting color is always a darker color. Multiplying any color with black (value of 0) produces black. Multiplying any color with white (value of 1) leaves the color unchanged. When you’re painting with a color other than black or white, each overlapping stroke produces progressively darker colors.

Screen

Multiplies the inverse of the paint and base colors. The resulting color is always a lighter color. Screening with black leaves the color unchanged. Screening with white produces white.

Overlay

Multiplies the colors, depending on the base color. Patterns or colors overlay the existing pixels while preserving the highlights and shadows of the base color. The base color is mixed with the paint color to represent the lightness or darkness of the original color.

Clone Brush Mode

Select Dynamic to move the clone source (the area the paint is sampled from) as you move the destination brush.

Select Static to keep the clone source stationary.

Set Clone Source

Click this button and then click an area on the surface to set that area as the source, or area where the paint sample is cloned from. If you paint over the clone source during a stroke, the original paint sample is used for the rest of the stroke, but the next stroke uses the updated clone source paint sample.

Blur Intensity

Defines the blurring effect of the brush. The higher the value, the more diffuse the blurring effect.

File Textures section

To paint an attribute directly on a model, the surfaces making up the model must have a file texture assigned to it for the attribute. You can create the file texture and assign it to the selected surfaces in this section, or you can do it in Hypershade.

Attribute to Paint

Select the material attribute you want to paint. Available attributes vary depending on the material type. For example, Specular Color is not available for a Lambert material. If you want to paint other attributes, assign a material to your model that has the available attribute. For details on these attributes, see Common Material Attributes in the Rendering guide. You can select from the following RGB and single channel attributes.

RGB Single Channel

Color

BumpMap

Transparency

Reflectivity

Incandescence

Diffuse

Specular Color

Translucence

Ambient

 

Reflected Color

 
Assign/Edit Textures

To assign a file texture, select the attribute you want to paint and then click this button.

The Assign/Edit File Textures window appears, with options similar to those in Hypershade’s Convert to File Texture Options window: Size X, Size Y, Keep Aspect Ratio, Image Format, Anti-alias, Background Mode, Background Color, Fill Texture Seams, Bake Using Virtual Plane, and Bake Transparency.

For descriptions of these options, see Edit > Convert to File Texture (Maya Software) in the Shading guide.

Note
  • If you have not previously painted or assigned file textures to the selected surfaces, a warning displays in the Command Feedback line that some surfaces have no file texture assigned to the current attribute. Also, the brush outline displays an X across it when you move the brush over the surface to indicate that you are unable to paint on it.
  • Be sure to assign a new shader before painting your object, otherwise you will modify the default shader. If this happens, the painted texture will be assigned to any new objects you create in your scene.
Save Textures

Click the Save Textures button at any time to save the texture.

Reload File Textures

Use this button to update the 3D Paint texture if it has been modified in some other paint package (for example, Paint Effects). If you do not reload a file texture after making changes to it in another program, the changes might not be recognized by 3D Paint.

Update on Stroke

Turn this option on to save the texture after each stroke you paint. Turn this option on when IPR rendering. As you release the mouse (or stylus) at the end of each stroke, the texture updates and the IPR render refreshes to reflect your changes.

NoteYou cannot erase with Update on Stroke turned on.

You can use the 3D Paint Tool while High Quality Rendering is turned on; this enables you to preview attributes such as bump and transparency while painting them, however you cannot see the stroke itself while it is being painted, since the texture is updated only at the end of each stroke.

Turn on Update on Stroke in order to automatically refresh the view in the UV Texture Editor window.

Save Texture on Stroke

Turn this option on to save each stroke to the file texture you are editing. The changes remain even if you do not save the scene. When this option is off (the default), you must save your scene for changes to the file texture to take effect.

Extend Seam Color

This option ensures a smooth transition between texture attributes at UV shell borders when you render. When this option is on, Maya extends the color you paint into the background past the shell and averages the painted and background colors at the border. This option is off by default.

Stroke section

For details, see Stroke section in the Artisan guide.

Stylus Pressure section

For details, see Stylus Pressure section in the Artisan guide.

Display section

For details, see Display section in the Artisan guide.