Have you tried this? Combine 2 or more wave patterns to form complex repeating patterns. If the waves are aligned they form harmonics, depending on how they are combined, if you then take 2 sets of those waves and have them combined you form a grid with repeats at different scales.
Nice video thx! I am interested on randomize the width of the several lines of this wave band pattern but keeping them straight. Any clue would be appreciated. Thanks!
Hi everyone! Let me know if you have any questions about the Wave texture node in the comments below! :)
Your node examples are a huge help in understanding them! It provides a shortcut to understanding what you can achieve! Keep them coming! 🖖👌👍
Glad you like them!
Have you tried this? Combine 2 or more wave patterns to form complex repeating patterns. If the waves are aligned they form harmonics, depending on how they are combined, if you then take 2 sets of those waves and have them combined you form a grid with repeats at different scales.
I haven't but it sounds fun :)
THE BEST
Very helpful sir thankyou so much
Hey CG Essentials - is there a way to have the texture follow an object's contours? For example: a wood grain for a chair curve
Nice video thx! I am interested on randomize the width of the several lines of this wave band pattern but keeping them straight. Any clue would be appreciated. Thanks!
Cool node!
It's a lot of fun :)
Hi thanks for the video, is it possible to use alpha so some gaps between waves are actually transparent?
It sounds like the voice of the wolf from Puss in Boots 2
Thanks
No problem!
Whats up TheeeeJustin....loving your nodes tutorials! Do you have any on the lesser known nodes such as math and such?
Not yet - I'm figuring if I try to do one new texture node a week I'll be well into September before I've covered all of them :)
@@TheCGEssentials ha yes true😁
How could I make lines move like a barber pole?
Would it be possible to change/update the wave frequencies based on an external input like a music file or any such type of wave data?
Well you could keyframe the frequencies, but I'm not sure if there's a way to exactly match up with an audio file or not
@@TheCGEssentials Thanks for the quick reply. I'll see if someone on StackExchange knows and get back to you.
Huh? Mark Zuckerberg?