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Vue F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Feb 23 3:59 pm)



Subject: Hospital Tile Textures...


drew_999 ( ) posted Thu, 24 October 2002 at 12:54 PM ยท edited Wed, 19 February 2025 at 12:24 AM

I'm currently building a condemned/abandoned hospital and I'm really in need of some grungy tiles, both for floor and walls. If anyone has a lead on anything like this I'd appreciate the info. dm


SAMS3D ( ) posted Thu, 24 October 2002 at 1:44 PM

Attached Link: http://www.3dtextures.fr.st/

This has a lot of textures for tiles....great place...Sharen


Alekssander ( ) posted Fri, 25 October 2002 at 1:26 AM

I'm not sure what Hospital Tiles looks like but there's a lot of link to stone textures down below. Try polished stone message.


YL ( ) posted Fri, 25 October 2002 at 2:35 AM

You could try to create tiles one by one (giving you the possibility to have missing tiles, or broken by boolean operations). For the textures, you could also try "cool and groovy stuff" above, then follow the link to texture sites ;=) Yves


impish ( ) posted Fri, 25 October 2002 at 4:10 AM

I'm sat in what was until a few years ago the Royal Liverpool Infirmary. A highly influential architectural design as it was the first to include Florence Nightingale's ideas on hospital design. It now houses the office I work in which was once the TB ward. While the tiles have been cleaned up as part of the restoration they are either original Victorian or modern replicas where replacements were required. The tiles are brick shaped and are roughly the dimension of a standard brick (240mm x 90mm) Working from floor to ceiling: Rounded brown tiles at floor level lead into 9 courses of brown tiles. Then there is a course of half brick sized tiles. The another 3 courses of brown tiles. A single row of lighter, half thickness yellow/brown tiles top this level with the bottom of the windows. Above this a row of square decorative tiles sits in a speckled light brown. This is topped by a second row of the lighter, half thickness tiles. Then there is a row of dark brown tiles. Above this run rows of creamy/yellow tiles for several meters. Then a row of green tiles, another row of cream/yellow tiles. These two types of tile form a pattern for four rows before we reach another cream/yellow row and finally a row of the green tiles. The chapel downstairs has some really ornate Victorian tiles. If people are interested I could bring my digital camera in next week and try to gets some pictures. Cheers Mark

impworks | vue news blog | twitter | pinterest


MightyPete ( ) posted Fri, 25 October 2002 at 1:23 PM

Take pictures. Set em up so that they can be made into textures. Like keep the camera 90 degrees to the object. If you do a good job zip em up and I'll make them seamless and upload them to free stuffs. You can just private message me...


LrdSatyr8 ( ) posted Fri, 25 October 2002 at 11:34 PM

Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/homepage.ez?Who=LrdSatyr8

I've got some good tile textures for free on my homepage you can use for your scene. Let me know if they help.


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