Thanks for responding!
As I mentioned, I messed around with that texture a little, but mine look horrible. But I don't believe I exported a normal map with mine but just left the vanilla one loaded in nifscope. I even took the pics I have of my own poker table and tried to layer that texture in to see what I could come up with, but it didn't look to good, lol.
One problem I had was that the flat area between the legs of the table seem to use the same texture that the surface of the table top uses. So when I changed the color of the table top that bottom part also changed color as well. That won't really work for what I would like to do but I'm so new to all this stuff I don't know how to change only the top and leave the bottom part alone, lol.
Like I said, it's just a thought and if you had the extra time to give it a go that would be great, but if not I completely understand. I can live with the vanilla table, but for the poker area of the private casino I'm building it would be nice to have more of a proper table but not mandatory.
If you did come up with something, it's no problem at all for me to pull up my model in nifscope and change it to point to the new texture. I think I've got a handle on that as I've made myself about 20 new framed pictures for decorating.
Thanks again!
Hey Balok,
I don't mind doing a quick retex for you but you might find you get a more satisfying result by doing it yourself =] Unless I miss my guess, the scratches on the table only look 3d because of a thing called a normal map (sorry I'm unsure of how much you know already about texturing).
A good guide to normal mapping can be found http://www.thenexusforums.com/index.php?/topic/236994-tut-normal-map-plugin-for-beginners/ =]
I only say this because as I already mentioned, NV still isn't playing ball, and so you'd have to reroute texture paths in nifskope anyway so it'd probably be just as much effort to make a quick texture yourself.
BTW for a felt texture, all you need to do is find some felt, take a photo (or google image search "felt texture"), then paste the photo over the existing texture in an image editing program (such as GIMP). Then scale and colour accordingly.
Hope this helps =]