Bump map

Textures often called Bump Maps, or Normal Maps are used to simulate three-dimensional details on a two-dimensional surface by manipulating its lighting. The process is known as Normal Mapping.
Contents
Format
Each pixel in a bump map contains the (x, y, z) coordinates that define a normalized vector.
Because of this each color channel in a bump map has a meaning:
- Red
- Horizontal facing (X axis)
- 0 = left
- 128 = forward, or facing viewer
- 255 = right
- Green
- Vertical facing (Y axis)
- 0 = up
- 128 = forward, or facing viewer
- 255 = down
- Blue
- Height (Z axis).
- 0 = facing 'in' to the texture, away from the viewer. This is a 'bad' value. Anything under 128 means that the surface should be facing away from the player, which is not possible.
- 128 = maximum depth capable of receiving dynamic light. It's a bad idea to go under this.
- 255 = facing 'out' of the texture towards the viewer.


dev/flat_normal
uses the above-mentioned values. However they are incorrect. An actually flat bump map should be [128, 128, 255]The three channels represent a normal vector for every pixel which represents the direction that the pixel is facing in 3D space. This allows the engine to generate shadows and highlights on a two-dimensional surface, or give a 3D model more detail.
A bump map is largely useless for really flat surfaces like smooth concrete or metal, but even rough concrete sometimes has enough depth to it to make one worthwhile.
Creation
A bump map should be rendered in Tangent space and use vector directions X+ Y- Z+.

Programs
Various programs can automate the creation of bump maps, either by image analysis or by using 3D geometry the user provides.
- 2D
- Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro
- Substance Designer
- The GIMP
- nDo
- 3D
- XSI
- ZBrush
- Lightwave
- 3ds Max
- Maya
- Blender
- NVIDIA Melody
- Cinema 4D
- NormalMapper
- xNormal
- Other
- Bitmap2Material 3: Alternative to CrazyBump.
- CrazyBump: Produces some very good normal maps. Some of them can be argued as almost having the same depth as a parallax map.
- Filter Forge: Can generate normal maps for its filters and external images.
- InsaneBump: Specifically made to be a free alternative to CrazyBump, produces high quality normal maps.
- MindTex: A cheaper alternative to CrazyBump. Also produces high-quality normal maps.
- Normal2dudv: a third party tool for converting bump maps to Dx8-friendly du/dv maps.
- ShaderMap: A free alternative to CrazyBump.
- SSBump Generator 5.3: Another free, open source alternative to CrazyBump that generates Self Shadowed Bump Maps as well as normal maps.
Conversion
In VTFEdit
When converting your texture:
- Choose BGR8888 or BGRA8888 (if your texture has an alpha channel) as your image format.
Tip: You can sometimes get away with DXT compression. More specifically, normal maps with DXT compression do not work in the 2006 build of Source, but do work in every other build.
- Check the "Normal map" box in the texture's flags list after the import is complete. It's about 1/5 of the way down the list.

In Vtex
- Save your normal map as a TGA. Give it a name that ends in _normal. The _normal at the end of the name will affect how Vtex converts it. For the brick wall example, we would name the file
brickwall_normal.tga
. - Add
nocompress 1
andnormal 1
to <texture filename>.txt in the same folder as your texture, then compile.
Implementation
See $bumpmap
.
See also
$ssbump
: creation and usage of Valve's new self-shadowing bump maps.- An old article that explains normal mapping quite well
- Polycount wiki page about normal maps
- Creating a Material