Understanding these constraints is the first step toward building a reliable workflow.
Always save your work to a local, non-synced drive first. Once the save is complete, manually copy or move the file into your Google Drive folder .
If you are a digital sculptor, you know the sinking feeling all too well: your hard drive crashes, your laptop gets stolen, or you accidentally save over a 40-hour project file. For ZBrush artists, the stakes are incredibly high. ZBrush files ( .ZTL and .ZPR ) are notoriously heavy, often ballooning into multi-gigabyte territories with high-poly counts.
Understanding these constraints is the first step toward building a reliable workflow.
Always save your work to a local, non-synced drive first. Once the save is complete, manually copy or move the file into your Google Drive folder .
If you are a digital sculptor, you know the sinking feeling all too well: your hard drive crashes, your laptop gets stolen, or you accidentally save over a 40-hour project file. For ZBrush artists, the stakes are incredibly high. ZBrush files ( .ZTL and .ZPR ) are notoriously heavy, often ballooning into multi-gigabyte territories with high-poly counts.