Adobe Fuse Hoodie

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Medical Clothing Pack for Mixamo Fuse

In this pack, you become 4 clothes. Sweatpants Sweater Scarf Woolcap Simply import it in Fuse as Clothing and use it. You can use all Textures from Fuse. This product collection contains Costumes for Adobe/Mixamo FUSE. Each costume is provided with all the costume elements contained within the promo image. Once you download the product, and unzip the pack - simply copy the contents of the files in the 'cloths' folder into your fuse installation 'cloths' folder. U PDATE (December 2020) – Per Adobe’s 2020 year-end earnings report, the company grew Creative annual recurring revenue by 19% over 2019. So on top of the 18 million Creative Cloud subscribers from last year, this gives an estimated new total of 21+ million subscribers. Quick Guide to Learning Adobe Illustrator's Pen Tool. Lukish favorited The plastic bag hoodie: How to fuse plastic bags and sew them into a hoodie by imrobot.

In what has appeared to be a sad news update Adobe has announced that it’s 3D character creation tool Fuse will no longer be developed and will stop working.

Adobe Fuse Hoodie Custom

Add nurses, doctors, and surgeons to your game with this medical clothing pack for Mixamo Fuse. NOTE: This clothing pack (a $20 value) is now FREE. Enjoy!

Hoodie For Adobe Fuse

This clothing pack extends your Mixamo Fuse library with medical garments and accessories. Also included is a blood-spattered cloth Substance, in case your surgeons are particularly messy (or zombified). This package is designed to be quickly imported directly into Fuse. Just unzip the included file and drop into your Fuse database folder.

NOTE: Character models not included.

Includes:

2 Scrub shirts (1 each male/female)
2 Scrub pants (1 each male/female)
2 Lab coats with scrub shirt (1 each male/female)
2 Patient gowns (1 each male/female)
1 Nurse-style shoes (unisex)
1 Bedroom slippers (unisex)
2 Surgeon's cap (unisex)
1 Surgeon's mask (unisex)
Clothing substance with color picker, blood spatter, and dirt sliders
Dozens of pre-made textures and materials for modelers who wish to rig the clothes separate from Fuse
Demo scene showing all objects with pre-made textures
Adobe fuse hoodie custom

© Copyright 2021 - ModelShark Studio. All Rights Reserved.

Adobe Fuse is no longer in development and will discontinue support on September 13, 2020.

For detailed information and assistance, see Adobe Fuse end-of-service FAQ.

Important notice for Mixamo customers.
We’re retiring features and services on this site, learn how this affects you. Visit http://blogs.adobe.com/adobecare/2017/05/23/download-assets-from-mixamo/.

To create a custom clothing for Fuse CC, you begin by choosing the base character on which you want to model your clothing. For the base character, you can either choose the base meshes (.obj) provided in the Content Creator Pack or a custom body that you have created. Then you create a high quality sculpt for your clothing item. You can create clothing items such as tops, bottoms, hats, eyewear, and shoes. Once your sculpt is ready, you extract the texture maps along with a low-resolution mesh of the custom clothing asset from your scuplting software. These files are then imported into Fuse CC.

Before you begin, see Create custom content for Fuse to know about the prerequisites and the general recommendations for creating custom clothing.

Clothing is modeled onto a base character. You can either:

  • Model your clothing on the base meshes provided in the Content Creator Pack (MaleFitA.obj and FemaleFitA.obj).
  • Model your clothing to fit onto a custom body you have created. See Create a custom body for details. To use the custom clothing in Fuse CC (Beta), first import the custom body.
Once you have picked your base character, the next step is to sculpt your clothing.

The quality of the sculpt is important to a good clothing asset. Use your digital sculpting software to achieve the highest quality in your sculpt.

Unlike the custom body, the custom clothing does not have any specific UV requirements. So you can create use topology and UV layout for the custom clothing. However, consider the following pointsfor the low resolution (or low poly) mesh that you create.

  • The low polymesh has soft normals (single smoothing group) so that all the hard edged information is held inside the normal map.
  • It has a single UV layout per item.
  • It does not extend beyond the 0-1 UV space.
  • It does not overlap and is not flipped/mirrored.
  • It is laid out either horizontally or vertically for consistent substances. For example, if you have the front of the shirt horizontal and the back of the shirt vertical, the substance like horizontal/vertical stripe can look very different from each other.

It is recommended to have the average triangle count in the range mentioned below depending on the custom clothing item that you are creating:

Tops: 2,000 - 4,000
Bottoms: 1,500 - 2,000
Hats: 1,000 - 2,000
Shoes: 2,000
Eyeware: 500 - 1,000

Once you have finished sculpting your custom clothing, you have to extract certain key maps from the digital sculpting software that you are using. These maps are used for generating textures for the custom clothing when you import them in Fuse CC.

The following settings are recommended for the extracted maps:

Map dimension: 2048 x 2048 pixels

Color depth: 8-bit RGB

Image format: PNG

Naming convention for extracted maps

The generic file naming structure for the maps is

Category_CharacterModeledOn_NameofItem_NameofMap. For example,

Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_StdNM.png.

The normal map holds the high-resolution details of your sculpt and projects that detail onto the low polygon geometry. You can extract the normal map from your sculpting program. Most of the detail of your clothing comes from this map.

The color mask is unique to the clothing, and important for defining the regions of the custom clothing where separate substances can be used. It is a simple color ID map that you can paint in any appropriate program. Whenever you need individual texture options on the custom clothing, you can mask off with any of the following 8 available color values:

ColorRGB valueHexadecimal value
Red255, 0, 0#ff0000
Green0, 255, 0#00ff00
Blue0, 0, 255#0000ff
Yellow255, 255, 0#ffff00
Magenta255, 0, 255#ff00ff
Cyan0, 255, 255#00ffff
White255, 255, 255#ffffff
Black0, 0, 0#000000

Note:

Try to use of all the eight colors in the Color Mask map, even if your default design doesn't need them. Notice how the pockets and sleeves are masked in the image above. Color masking allows further customization and use of a clothing asset.

If there are transparent parts of the custom clothing asset, the transparency should be simply included in the alpha channel of the color mask. To do this in Photoshop CC, see Create and edit alpha channel masks.

The occlusion mask is unique to clothing and hair. It is painted on the base character on which the clothing is fitted over. The occlusion mask excludes the body geometry that is covered by clothing. To create this mask:

  1. With the clothing item placed over the character, paint the body polygons that you want to delete in black.
  2. Paint the rest of the polygons in white.

The ambient occlusion (AO) map holds the shadow information for your high resolution sculpt and is used to add that shading information into your custom clothing within Fuse CC (Beta). You can extract the ambient occlusion map from your sculpting program.

The detail map allows you to overlay your own custom painted detail on top of your custom clothing. This is useful for adding those detail that Fuse CC (Beta) does not provide. You can add the details like logos or other designs for your clothing in this map.

Use the recommended naming convention for filenames for importing them into Fuse CC in an organized manner.

Your clothing geometry: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt.obj
Normal Map: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_NM.png
Color Mask: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_Mask.png
Occlusion Mask: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_OccMask.png
Ambient Occlusion Map: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_AO.png
Detail Overlay Map: Top_MaleFitA_RolledSleevesShirt_DetailDiff.png

To import custom body files, choose File > Import > Import Clothing option from the menu bar in Fuse CC. See Import custom clothing and hair for details.