Hi thanks, I think you are talking about isocurves. Try these actions 1. Options 2. View 3. Display modes 4. Shaded + Wireframe 5. Visibility 6. Show isocurves
@@AdamArchh hmm no that's not it. When you finished drawing the Ellipsoid (00:20 sec) the Ellipsoid changed to a single curved line. I want to know what the command is :)
Hi Adam I have the same issue like Thunderbird1626 I tryed aswell your method but after doing some research I found something about "ClippingPlane" didn`t manage to find the option to test it, is it why are we seeing the whole elipsoid in front view?
The ellipsoid appears as a single curve, which is related to the display mode. In wireframe mode, objects are displayed as wireframes. The finer curves, known as isocurves, do not have a functional purpose but help you better visualize the objects.
Imagine that you take a paper and make it a cylinder. A line is formed where the beginning and the end of the paper meet. Keeping it out of the trim may be more advantageous for a smooth surface
Thanks so much!
There are not much video tutorials on rhino and you are definitely amongst the best one !
Very helpful!
Glad it helped!
Thank you. I didn’t know how to begin modeling g shapes like this one and now I’m excited to practice
Thx you🙏🏽. Why my surface is: open surface and not "close polysurface?
Wow! always amazing tutorials. learning a lot. thanks!
Thanks for support
thank you very much for your tutorials , very helpful 👍
Glad you like them!
Thank you bro amazing video tutorial
Thank you
Thanks. Turning surface seams in. so it is not visible from the outside. It may not be so important
.
thank you 😍
Hi Adam, very nice tutorial.
But as a Rhino beginner I was wondering how you delete te lines of the ellipsoid? thanks
Hi thanks, I think you are talking about isocurves.
Try these actions
1. Options
2. View
3. Display modes
4. Shaded + Wireframe
5. Visibility
6. Show isocurves
@@AdamArchh hmm no that's not it. When you finished drawing the Ellipsoid (00:20 sec) the Ellipsoid changed to a single curved line. I want to know what the command is :)
This is not a command, This is the wireframe viewport. Like shaded or rendered viewports.
@@AdamArchh haha no before that. 00:18 - 00:19-00:20 seconds of the tutorial. I tried all the viewports but that's not it. :)
I'm having the same problem :( and I can't trim the ellipsoid because of it@@thunderbird1626
Hi Adam I have the same issue like Thunderbird1626 I tryed aswell your method but after doing some research I found something about "ClippingPlane" didn`t manage to find the option to test it, is it why are we seeing the whole elipsoid in front view?
Hi, can you try this
1. Tools (In the Main Menu Bar)
2. Options
3. View
4. Display Modes
5. Shaded
6. Visibility
7. Show isocurves
The ellipsoid appears as a single curve, which is related to the display mode. In wireframe mode, objects are displayed as wireframes. The finer curves, known as isocurves, do not have a functional purpose but help you better visualize the objects.
@@AdamArchh ooh I see, I managed to completr the guide ty alot for ur reply
Thank you! Are these seams important or you just casually rotate them as you like?
Imagine that you take a paper and make it a cylinder. A line is formed where the beginning and the end of the paper meet. Keeping it out of the trim may be more advantageous for a smooth surface
Didn’t know that. Keep up the great work)
Can somebody explain why did he use the seamsrf tool?
thx!!