

Once you're content with your texture, you should save it as whatever name the block previously had. (The texture will be tiny, you can use control+the scroll wheel to make it larger or smaller, at least in .) Once you open up the texture, you should see something like this: I would not recommend regular paint, due to the lack of features. Personally, I use, but GIMP or Photoshop works too. Open the folder of whatever texture you want to edit, and once you find that texture, right click it to open it with some photo editing software. Models: How your armor looks when it's on you. Misc: The textures for forcefields, and the texture that covers your screen when underwater.

GUI: A bunch of other random GUI things, along with an alternate location for Container. Inside each of these folders is a specific set of textures, with more detail in the spoiler:Īchievements: The achievement screen GUI and related buttons.Ĭontainer: The GUIs for anvils, beacons, brewing stands, crafting tables, dispensers/droppers, enchtables, furnaces, chests, hoppers, horses, your inventory, and villagers.Įffect: Dither, which is used for Super Secret Settings, and will be removed in 1.9. Once you open up the resource pack folder and open up your copies resource packs, click on "assets", then "minecraft", and then "textures". The copy/pasting is so that if you mess up and accidentally save the texture, you still have the default texture, which you can copy/paste and restart. Now drag your base resource pack in here, copy/paste it, and give it whatever name you want. minecraft folder this can be done by, if you're on windows, pressing the windows key, typing in %appdata% in the little search bar at the bottom, clicking on "roaming", then on ".minecraft" and finally on "resourcepacks", and if you're on a Mac, open up minecraft, go to options, resource packs, and then click on the "open resource packs folder" button at the bottom. Personally, I use faithful 32x32, but you can use anything. The first thing you want to do is to download a base resource pack that you can use as a sort of template. Disclaimer: This guide assumes that you have basic photo editing skills.
