Align Surface
The purpose of the align surface tool is to modify two existing
surfaces by creating positional, tangential or curvature continuity
between them. Try to tweak the values in the option boxes before you
finish the align operation. At first pass, the results given from the
align surface tool can seem somewhat disappointing. But by adjusting
the different values, you can get different results for the align
operation.
Stitch Edge
Stitch edge aligns two adjacent surfaces and works much like align
surface, but stitch edges allow the user to stitch partial surface
edges to adjacent surfaces using a control along the stitched edge that
adjusts the amount of the surface that aligns along the edge.
Global Stitch
Global stitch works very differently than align surface. The
process is very simple. Pick all of the surfaces you want to have
aligned, then use global stitch. The problem with global stitch is that
the surfaces do not behave the way they should all of the time. Global
stitch does not maintain tangency between surfaces during animation
setup and animation. If the settings are working, this tool will do a
great job of keeping the surfaces tangent throughout production.
Getting the tool applied correctly, however, can be tricky. Following
are some rules for using global stitch:
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Attach-Sculpt Surface-Detach
Attach-sculpt surface-detach is a variation of attach and detach.
Often when you attach a surface, a ridge occurs where the surfaces come
together. One way to get rid of this ridge is to smooth the surfaces
that are attached before detaching them. The easiest way to edit these
surfaces is to use the sculpt surface tool. This tool has a NURBS
smoothing option that averages out the values of the CVs in the current
selection.
Individual surfaces can be selected for editing with the sculpt surface tool, or individual vertices can be edited as well, using the Mask Unselected Vertices option before editing. The area that needs smoothing can be edited using the sculpt surface interactive brush, or an overall value can be set in the Max Displacement option box. Alternatively, the area can be smoothed using the Flood button. When you finish smoothing the points, detach the surface to restore the even surface layout.
Pulling Points
Until now, the major reason for having a grid of surfaces that
align has not been obvious. When you manipulate points on a surface to
align with other points on adjacent surfaces, you can see why I use
this approach.
The only points on a NURBS surface where you have direct control on the position of the surface is at the edges. Any other place on the surface will have CVs and hulls that pull away from the surface. You can easily change the shape of a surface in the middle of a surface by pulling points. But, unlike the vertices at the edges, pulling points in the middle of the surface provides less direct control of where exactly the surface will fall in 3D space.
An additional row of hulls are inside the boundaries of each NURBS surface. If you look at a NURBS surface, you can determine the number of hulls by counting the number of spans in the surface, and adding 2. Because I am creating a grid where edges of surfaces line up with the adjacent edges of surfaces, I can snap points from one surface exactly to points of the adjacent surface.
The alignment tools do not completely fix alignment on a five-cornered intersection. Attach-detach provides most of the alignment along the surface edges, but to get the last little bit, you just gotta pull points.
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