Skin Parameters Rollout

On the Skin Parameters rollout, you adjust the complexity of the mesh of the loft object. You can also optimize the mesh by controlling the face count.

Procedures

Example: To use a constant cross section:

  1. Maximize the Front viewport, and then draw a Rectangle object with Ctrl held down, to create a square about 20 x 20 units.
  2. Create another rectangle beside it about 200 x 100 units.
  3. Apply a Skew modifier to the large rectangle, but don't alter the Skew parameters.
  4. Create a loft object in which the larger rectangle is the path and the square is the shape.
  5. On the Modify panel, open the Skin Parameters rollout, and make sure Skin is on in the Display group.

    You can now see the wireframe structure of the lofted rectangle, with cross-sectional sides parallel to its corners.

    Make sure the color assigned the loft object is easily visible. Change it if necessary.

  6. Turn off Constant Cross-Section, and observe the corners.

    When Constant Cross-Section is off, the corners become pinched.

  7. Turn on Constant Cross-Section to restore the corners.

    Acute angles can cause problems when the cross sections formed by the path steps intersect at the corners. You can mitigate this by avoiding acute angles or by reducing the path steps.

  8. Press H on the keyboard to open the Select From Scene dialog, and select Rectangle02 (the second larger rectangle).
  9. On the Modify panel, change the Skew Axis to Y, and then set the Amount spinner to 95.
  10. Use (Zoom Region) to zoom in on the upper-right corner of the rectangle so you can see the mesh in detail.

    At a skew of less than 100, the acute angle still works because the path cross sections haven't intersected.

  11. Set the Skew Amount to 300, and examine the same corner.

    At this angle, the path cross sections intersect, causing problems in the mesh.

  12. Select the loft object, and set Path Steps to 1.

    The cross sections no longer intersect, and the corner is clean.

    When creating straight-edge molding for architectural modeling, you can avoid mangled corners simply by reducing the path steps to 0.

Interface

Capping group

Cap Start

When on, the end of a loft at the first vertex of the path is covered, or capped. When off, the end is open, or uncapped. Default=on.

Cap End

When on, the end of a loft at the last vertex of the path is covered, or capped. When off, the end is open, or uncapped. Default=on.

  • Morph Arranges cap faces in a predictable, repeatable pattern necessary for creating morph targets. Morph capping can generate long, thin faces that do not render or deform as well as those created with grid capping.
  • Grid Arranges cap faces in a rectangular grid trimmed at the shape boundaries. This method produces a surface of evenly sized faces that can be deformed easily by other modifiers.

Roadway lofted with capping turned off

Roadway lofted with capping turned on

Options group

Shape Steps

Sets the number of steps between each vertex of the cross-section shapes. This value affects the number of sides around the perimeter of the loft.

Left: Shape Steps=0

Right: Shape Steps=4

Path Steps

Sets the number of steps between each main division of the path. This value affects the number of segments along the length of the loft.

Frame lofted with Path Steps=1

Frame lofted with Path Steps=5

Optimize Shapes

When on, the Shape Steps setting is ignored for straight segments of cross-section shapes. If multiple shapes are on the path, only straight segments that have a match on all shapes are optimized. Default=off.

Left: Optimize Shapes turned on

Right: Optimize Shapes turned off

Optimize Path

When on, the Path Steps setting is ignored for straight segments of the path. Curved sections respect the Path steps setting. Available only with Path Steps mode. Default=off.

When Optimize Path is off, the lofted roadway uses more steps.

When Optimize Path is on, straight sections of the lofted roadway don't require additional steps.

Adaptive Path Steps

When on, analyzes the loft and adapts the number of path divisions to generate the best skin. Main divisions along the path occur at path vertices, shape locations, and deformation curve vertices. When off, main divisions along the path occur only at path vertices. Default=on.

Contour

When on, each shape follows the curvature of the path. The positive Z axis of each shape is aligned with the tangent to the path at the shape's level. When off, shapes remain parallel and have the same orientation as a shape placed at level 0. Default=on.

Lofting the roadway with Contour off causes it to twist.

Roadway lofted with Contour turned on

Banking

When on, shapes rotate about the path whenever the path bends and changes height in the path's local Z axis. The bank amount is controlled by 3ds Max. Banking is ignored if the path is 2D. When off, shapes do not rotate about their Z axis as they traverse a 3D path. Default=on.

Roadway lofted with Banking turned on

Constant Cross-Section

When on, the cross sections are scaled at angles in the path to maintain uniform path width. When off, the cross sections maintain their original local dimensions, causing pinching at path angles.

Frame lofted with Constant Cross-Section turned off

Frame lofted with Constant Cross-Section turned on

Linear Interpolation

When on, generates a loft skin with straight edges between each shape. When off, generates a loft skin with smooth curves between each shape. Default=off.

Left: Object lofted with Linear Interpolation turned off

Right: Object lofted with Linear Interpolation turned on

Flip Normals

When on, reverses the normals 180 degrees. Use this option to correct objects that are inside-out. Default=off.

Quad sides

When on, and when two sections of a loft object have the same number of sides, the faces that stitch the sections together are displayed as quads. Sides between sections with different numbers of sides are not affected, and are still connected with triangles. Default=off.

Transform Degrade

Causes the loft skin to disappear during sub-object shape/path transformations. For example, moving a vertex on the path causes the loft to disappear. When off, you can see the skin during these Sub-Object transformations. Default=off.

Display group

Skin

When on, displays a loft's skin in all views using any shading level and ignores the Skin In Shaded setting. When off, displays only the loft sub-objects. Default=on.

Skin in Shaded

When on, displays a loft's skin in shaded views regardless of the Skin setting. When off, skin display is controlled by the Skin setting. Default=on.

The loft object now retains the Skin and Skin In Shaded settings from one loft object to the next one created.