, ensuring "realism in every bite" with intricate textures and shaders that support extreme close-up renders. Technical Specs Polygon Count
This volume is carefully divided into two essential categories:
: Includes 20 distinct professional sets featuring items such as mushrooms, fruits, meat, cheese, coffee beans, nuts, bottles, glasses, carafes, and full cutlery arrangements. High Realism : Models are created using 3D scanning technology Evermotion Archmodels Vol. 213 Food and Cutlery Sets
Note: Evermotion frequently runs "Weekly Specials" offering up to 40% off on older volumes, but Vol. 213 is considered a premium, high-demand release, so discounts may be rare.
solves this by providing pre-rigged materials and shaders that require minimal tweaking. The models come with high-resolution textures (up to 4K and 8K) that include diffuse, gloss, reflection, bump, and displacement maps. , ensuring "realism in every bite" with intricate
While the models are perfect, randomness sells realism. Use the multi-object scatter tools to randomly rotate forks and spoons slightly. Add a random color correction map to fruits so that the apples aren't identical shades of red.
Few things tell a story of domestic comfort, culinary luxury, or high-end dining quite like a well-set table. This is where enters the conversation. This specific collection has become an essential resource for artists looking to elevate their interior scenes from sterile showcases to warm, inhabitable spaces. 213 is considered a premium, high-demand release, so
Food is notoriously difficult to simulate. It requires complex shader networks to handle subsurface scattering (SSS), specularity, and diffuse color variations. A piece of fruit isn't just one color; it contains imperfections, bruises, and varying levels of translucency. Similarly, cutlery poses its own set of problems. High-polish reflective surfaces like stainless steel silverware demand high-quality environment mapping and proper lighting to look realistic. If the lighting is off, a fork can look like a piece of gray plastic rather than polished metal.
The "Cutlery" in the title is just as important as the food. This collection provides high-quality models of flatware—forks, knives, spoons, and serving utensils. The value here lies in the topology. These models are optimized for subdivision, meaning they maintain smooth edges under close-up camera shots without bogging down the viewport. The geometry is clean, making it easy for artists to apply their own custom metal materials if they wish, though the included presets are usually top-tier.