SubD shrinks the object
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If you use the crease tool on the top vertex it will stay in place, or a small face.
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Agree, crease will keep the point in place, but the sub-divided surface is then not a sphere anymore. I would like both.
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Hi Thomas
@unknownuser said:
The Catmull-Clark based subdivision that OpenSubdiv uses does cause shrinking. There are no options to have it lie on the surface of the control mesh
***As I mentioned initially, I like the concept of SubD a lot.
From my point of view it delivers a major missing functionality in Sketchup:- Model and work with low poly producing a small file size
- When needed, with the press of a button, switch all components between the low and a high poly version back and forth as often as you want.
Simply great!***
Therefore my question: Would you consider extending the SubD plugin to provide an additional option "CatMull-Interpolation" (as opposed to the existing CatMull-Clark approximation that shrinks)?
(Remark: In technical design and architecture, objects like walls should not shrink in a high poly version)I did some tests using the BZ-spline plugin (from Fredo6) offering a CatMull curve Interpolation.
The results are in attached pictures. It shows, that the CatMull interpolation yields the same results as the SubD CatMull-Clark SubDiv algorithm, just that it does not shrink the object and all vertices are on the subdivided Surface.
What I did is basically use the two top and bottom loops ("circles") and generated a CatMull interpolation using the plugin. (It added a middle point outside each edge). Then I manually connected all new edges to get the quads for the subdiveded cone.The original cone with slanted chopped head:
Subdivided cone with SubD level 1. The wire-diagram of the original cone shows the "shrinking":
Manually subdivided cone using CatMull curve interpolation (added 1 point for each edge) and the wire diagram of the original cone:
Manually vs SubD subdivided Cone. SubD Version has the same shape, just a bit smaller:
The example I did does not cover subdividing in all three dimensions (it would be a lot of manual work), but I hope it shows the idea.
Best Regards
Uwe -
SUbD is using OpenSubdiv: http://graphics.pixar.com/opensubdiv/docs/intro.html
So I don't control the subdivision features of that.As for "CatMull-Interpolation", is there an formula that works in 3D? What you describe you did manually sounds like running two 2D interpolation operations on the top and bottom ends of your shape. But I don't see how one could apply this generically to any arbitrary mesh... You got some references for that?
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According to the doc, it should be 3D Catmull interpolation. I will test.
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Hi thomthom,
I have checked the Catmull-Rom Spline in 3D and it works very ice.The object used as a starting point is a regular cube that was subdiveded with SubD on the first level. This contains planar circles with 8 segments as well as non-planar "circles".
The CatMull interpolation was done with all corner points as control points. Each loop on the object was interpolated. The interpolation added one point to each existing segment (like increasing the level by one with SubD). Then the interpolated loops were manually connected to form the subdivided mesh.For comparision, below screenshots also show the result when using SubD with level 2 subdividing on the cube.
The red circle below shows how the coarse 8 corner circle from the subdivided cube is smoothed.
Also good to see is, that the SubD subdivided cube is not yet a sphere (compare with the red circle).
As all corner points of the Level 1 SubD cube were used as control Points for the CatMull-Rom spline, the interpolated object is getting smoother, but will not become a sphere, since the starting object is not spherical.Could this interpolation be added to SubD as a "none shrinking" option?
I also have attached the sketchup model from which these images were created.
Kind Regards
Uwe
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How would you apply this to an arbitrary mesh? A cube is quite a simple example. You describe you worked on the loops of the cube - but in an arbitrary mesh it's not going to be as clean and simple as a cube.
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Do you have an example mesh that you consider complex enough to play with? I wiill take that mesh and subdivide it manually to show / develop the idea.
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I can look for more, but here is one for starters: https://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=397&t=63826#p584981
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I only did the Bell for now. But I hope it shows the idea/Concept.
The task is to keep the dimensions of the objects the same but still making the surface smooth.
For the bell this means that the sharp edges have to be smoothed and the less curved areas should be become round. As the less curved areas are the top of the bell. -
I did some further testing with Catmull Interpolation. I found that in principle it works, but in the area of sharper edges/corners the Catmull Interpolation (by definition) will "inflate" the area on both sides around the edge/corner quite a bit. This could be solved in a similar way as in SubD where one can define a crease value.
But instead of defining how an edge/corner shall be interpolated, there is another way to obtain smooth edges and corners without shrinking: FredoCorner.
Combining FredoCorner and SubD in a workflow, will not solve the shrinking issue completely.
But using FreeoCorner in areas where no shrinking shall apply and use SubD on top to smooth the remaining areas, is a good compromise giving a lot of flexibility in subdividing.An open point is, that FredoCorner does not (yet) offer a toggle on/off feature like SubD.
@Thom: Not sure if there is a collaboration/exchange between you and Fredo, but this would be a perfect combination
My last question on this "shrinking" topic: Will or is there an option in SubD to exclude areas from being subdivided in a group/component? Like you can define a crease as infinitely sharp, an area enclosed by sharp edges could be excluded for instance.
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@uwesketch said:
Combining FredoCorner and SubD in a workflow, will not solve the shrinking issue completely.
But using FreeoCorner in areas where no shrinking shall apply and use SubD on top to smooth the remaining areas, is a good compromise giving a lot of flexibility in subdividing.Yea, for cases where you only want bevel/chamfer then other tools like FredoCorner is better - provides a leaner mesh. Hard edge modelling with SUbD will leave you with lots of extra faces that isn't really needed. At least in the form SUbD have to work inside of SU - uniform subdivision.
OpenSubdiv supports adaptive subdivision, but it's view based. Since SU doesn't have an API to override how an object appear it can't really be used for the purpose of SUbD.@uwesketch said:
An open point is, that FredoCorner does not (yet) offer a toggle on/off feature like SubD.
I know the old RoundCorner didn't. But I thought the new FredoCorner had an edit feature. Pretty sure I at least saw a function to revert bevel/chamfer.
@uwesketch said:
@Thom: Not sure if there is a collaboration/exchange between you and Fredo, but this would be a perfect combination
We talk. Some of his recent extensions are starting to have support for QuadFace Tools quads.
@uwesketch said:
My last question on this "shrinking" topic: Will or is there an option in SubD to exclude areas from being subdivided in a group/component? Like you can define a crease as infinitely sharp, an area enclosed by sharp edges could be excluded for instance.
Afraid not. Bridging the subdivided geometry with the not subdivided isn't really doable without artefacts. The shrinking effect of the subdivided mesh is one reason for this.
Originally I created planar quads as a single face instead of two triangles - in an attempt to optimise the face count. But when you came to perform crease adjustments etc it'd be causing lag when the planar native quad had to be broken into triangles.
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@unknownuser said:
thomthom wrote:
I know the old RoundCorner didn't. But I thought the new FredoCorner had an edit feature. Pretty sure I at least saw a function to revert bevel/chamfer.Yes, there is an Undo/Edit function. Which is a great feature and a good starting point for a (global) Toggle On/Off like in SubD.
But such a toggle on/off is not there yet.
Another issue is, that when using SubD on a group/component where FredoCorner has been applied, the FredoCorner Undo/Edit does not work anymore. Seem like SubD overwrites some information used by FredoCorner.
Would be great, if both tools could work together. Kind of a "FreThom tool"@unknownuser said:
thomthom wrote:
Afraid not. Bridging the subdivided geometry with the not subdivided isn't really doable without artefacts. The shrinking effect of the subdivided mesh is one reason for this.Originally I created planar quads as a single face instead of two triangles - in an attempt to optimise the face count. But when you came to perform crease adjustments etc it'd be causing lag when the planar native quad had to be broken into triangles.
I see. Then I have another idea (since the adaptive Subdivision feature from OpenSubDiv also cannot be applied in SU):
As an option selectable by the user in SubD, could you run at the end of the subdivision process the "remove triangulation" from Quadface tool and then the "Merge Faces" Tool from your CleanUp3 (or the "Remove coplanar edges" command from Fredos "EdgeControl" tool)?
Like this, the still planar faces after subdivision would not contain so many coplanar edges. -
You mean something like this?
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Yes, exactly.
But in a way, that afterwards you can toggle off the subdivision again.
I think when converting to a simple mesh, you cannot un-subd anymore. -
I've logged that as an enhancement request. Need to investigate a but further regarding some techincal details of applying creasing when the mesh isn't all triangles.
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