The most discussed aspect of this release is, without a doubt, the -double melon- suffix. In digital art slang, "melon" often refers to round, voluminous shapes—specifically, the character's bust geometry. However, "double melon" in this context is a technical misdirection.

Upon inspecting the .blend and .pmx files, "double melon" refers to two distinct, layered asset modules:

The "Park Exhibition" aesthetic has always sat in the uncanny valley between anime stylization and realistic anatomy. With -v1.01- -double melon-, the artist leans further into hyper-stylized realism.

The Face: The JK's face has been subtly re-sculpted. The eyes are larger (a deviation from realistic proportions) but the shaders on the sclera (the white of the eye) now include wetness maps that reflect the park environment. The nose is almost nonexistent in profile, a throwback to classic 90s anime, clashing beautifully with the hyper-detailed fabric of the uniform.

The Uniform: The double melon effect is masked by a surprisingly conservative design. The blouse is fully buttoned with a ribbon tie, and the pleated skirt falls to mid-thigh. This "modest on the outside, complex on the inside" approach is why Park Exhibition models are favored by professional animators who need censorship-safe assets for commercial work.

The Lighting Test: When placed in the official "Exhibition Park" environment (a Japanese botanical garden with cherry blossoms), the -double melon- assets shine. The watermelon bag's rind texture captures subsurface scattering from the pink petals, while the primary melon geometry casts soft ambient occlusion onto the folded arms. It is, technically speaking, a masterclass in indirect lighting.

"Park Exhibition JK -v1.01- -double melon-" appears to be a themed creative project name (likely a visual or performance exhibition variant). This tutorial assumes it’s a park-based exhibition centered on a Japanese school-uniform (JK) aesthetic combined with a playful "double melon" visual motif. The guide below walks you through planning, designing, producing, and running the exhibition with practical, actionable steps.

Practical tip: prioritize a single standout installation (invest most budget there) and simplify secondary pieces.

The primary chest physics have been completely remodeled. Instead of standard spherical proxies, v1.01 uses a dual-lattice softbody system. This allows for compression and rebound that mimics realistic fabric tension. The "melon" tag comes from the shape language: the bust is modeled after the Yubari King Melon—taut, wide at the base, with a subtle vertical crease effect added via normal maps.

While the original asset remains partially gated behind artstation pro or pixiv fanbox paywalls, leaked previews and low-resolution screengrabs describe a specific composition: