Automatic UV mapping

Automatic mapping creates UVs for a polygon mesh by attempting to find the best UV placement by simultaneously projecting from multiple planes. This method of UV mapping is useful on more complex shapes where the basic planar, cylindrical, or spherical projections do not produce UVs that are useful, especially on components that project outwards or are hollow in nature.

Automatic mapping creates several UV map pieces or shells in texture space. This is fine if you are using tools that deal with UVs automatically for you, such as the 3D Paint tool in projection mode. If you need to work with the UVs manually, you will need to stitch the UV shells back together in the UV Editor using the Move and Sew UV Edges feature.

You can also specify user-defined planes for the projection of UV texture coordinates. The Load Projection option uses a polygon object you specify from the current scene.

To facilitate more accurate UV projections a projection manipulator is displayed when using the Automatic Mapping feature. The projection manipulator lets you correlate the multiple planar UV projections that occur in the scene view with how the resulting UVs appear in the UV Editor.

The projection manipulator appears centered about the selected object in the scene view with blue planes that correspond to the number of planes set by the Automatic Mapping’s Planes option. A light blue color indicates that the projection plane is oriented facing away from the selected object, while a dark blue plane indicates the side of the projection plane that is oriented facing towards the selected object.

The manipulator’s planes are displayed semi-transparent at a scale of 50% of the actual projection plane so they don’t fully occlude the object when using the manipulator. Red and green lines appear along the edge of each plane to indicate the corresponding U and V axes within the UV Editor.

You can move, rotate, and scale the UV projection manipulator just like other manipulators in Maya. Scaling the manipulator affects the resulting scale of the projected UVs in the UV Editor.

You can reset any transformations for the projection manipulator using the Channel Box. When a custom projection object is specified using the Load Projection option, the projection manipulator gets updated to reflect the planes specified by the custom projection.

To map UVs for a polygon object using Automatic Mapping

  1. Select a polygon object in the scene view that you want to project UVs texture coordinates.
  2. Select UV > UV Editor to display the UV Editor or select the UV Editing workspace to view the perspective view and the UV Editor side by side.

    When you project the UVs they will appear in the UV Editor’s 2D view.

  3. From the Modeling menu set, select UV > Automatic > (if you need to set options), or in the UV Editor's UV Toolkit go to Create > Automatic.
    Set the following options depending on your requirements:
    • Set the Planes setting to the desired number of projections you require and click Project. (The more planes you use, the less distortion in the UV layout but the more shells are created).
  4. The automatic mapping projection manipulator appears centered about the object in the scene view with blue projection planes that correspond to the Planes setting you specified. That is, if the Planes option was set to 4, then 4 planes appear on the manipulator.

  5. To move, rotate, or scale the projection manipulator do the following:
    • To move the projection manipulator in X, Y, Z, drag any of the three colored arrow handles while moving your mouse.
    • To rotate the projection manipulator, click the light blue circular rotate handle to make the X, Y, Z rotate handles appear. Dragging any of the three circles rotates the manipulator about X, Y, or Z.
    • To non-proportionally scale the projection manipulator, drag any of the three colored box handles on the manipulator.
    • To uniformly scale the projection manipulator, click any of the three box handles on the tip of the manipulator so a 3D box appears. Drag the box to scale the manipulator uniformly.
  6. Use the UV Editor to view and edit the resulting UVs.
    Note: Projection mapping only works properly on a single object at a time. If you need to apply a projection to multiple polygonal objects in a single step, combine the objects into one, apply the projection, and then separate the parts. Otherwise, perform a projection on each object separately.

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