3ds Max Modeling :: Chamfer Corners Aren't Perfectly Round
Feb 14, 2014
I'm making a pretty easy model where one side of a box needs to be round.When I chamfer the two corner edges it obviously becomes a round end.
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But the problem is that this round end isn't the shape of a perfect circle.I included a picture to show my problem.The box has a width of 30mm and the chamfer amount is 15mm.I've put a cylinder on top of it with a radius of 15 to show that the chamfer isn't perfectly round.
I have been trying to figure out if there is a more efficient way of doing this for some time. It seems so basic but it always comes to play in my smoothing process.
For all you more experienced modelers, what is the best way to have the edges and corners stay at their 90 degree angles when smoothing while not compromising the roundness of the surface with artifacting or pinching in the corners. I find this problem when creating extrudes with sharp corners on curved/ round surfaces then smoothing them.
what i have is a wall decal im trying to finish up. I'v gotten it to size and everything, but there are some very rough edges which i cannot get rid of. i''ve tried everything that comes to mind. anyone have any tricks that you can share? basics?
Designer Pro X: I've done this one time before and for the life of me I can't remember how, and can't find anything in search or in the manual. I made a rectangle and need to know how to round the corners. I know I'm gonna' kick myself when I find out.
I know you can edit corners and angles for rectangles and elipses ut is there a way to do it for other shapes?
More specifically, there is a 8 pointed star shape that I want to give more curved points. Is this possible or should I just use the original as a 'template' and and draw it myself?
I use Photoshop 7.0, I use the marquee tool frequently. It always used to have straight corners, but the past week it has started to automatically do round corners. I haven't changed any settings. Why does this happen? I can mention that I use InDesign CS2. I have worked a lot with rectangles with round corners there recently, but every time changed the corners manually. After a couple of weeks though the program started to automatically change every rectangle to round corners. I didn't know how to change this, but after a couple of weeks it went back to straight corners automatically. I use Windows Vista. Initially there was some problems to make it go with Photoshop and InDesign, but now it works fine most of the time.
I need to round off the corners on an image to make it look like a credit card. Please help me figure out how to do that. I'm working on Photoshop 6 running on Mac OSX.
I would like to create a triangle, but with (really) round corners. Not just the points rounded off a little, but the corners going around evenly like circles.
(see infantile free-hand drawing attachment as an example)
Is this to accomplish in an easy manner?
edit:
The attachment seems to be missing, so here's a link: [URL].......
I have a multiple layer image with a background image on one layer. Is there an easy way to round the bottom corners of this one layer? BTW -I'm using CS6.
I have searched, watched videos, and more to try and figure out how to round the corners on my photo. I followed what instruction were available and still no luck. I will describe what I have done.  Objective: Round corners on a 960 px x 250 px photo for a website. Radius 35 px. Photo already sized the way I need it. Background needs to be transparent saved in png 24 so nothing shows except the photo with rounded corners.  Step one: I insert image into Photoshop  Step two: Use rounded rectangle tool:  Step 3: Move photo layer to the top of my rounded rectangle layer
Step 4: Clip Alt+Enter line between the layers: I get nothing but the transparency. Â Step 5: Merge Visible. Still Nothing.
I'm working on a lj mood theme and I learned how to create round corners - basically I create a new tranparent image, go to modify - > smooth (5px) and then paste the original image. It works fine!, until I try to add a border using the stroke tool - the corners don't get the border, as you can seehere. I really don't know what I'm doing wrong, if it's a setting or what. I've tried several blending modes, all locations (inside, center, outside), preserve transparency, nothing works. Of course, I'm completely challenged when it comes to photoshop, so I could really use your help on this one.
I'm looking to use script-fu to automate a process I do at work.
What I do is find images, paste them into GIMP, scale them down, and round the corners.
I've been playing around with script fu to make it automatically scale the image and round the corners, but I've run into problems with the image variable needing to be changed each time something is pasted.
Is there a way I can automate this, perhaps some code that will set the image variable to whatever the current window is, or am I stuck doing "manual labor"?
How to create an animated gif with round corners? I know to create rounded corners for normal images with the crop function, but I don't know how to make rounded corners for animated gifs.
I love Adobe Photoshop Elements. I have gotten Version 10 lately and I have to say, Adobe does not make certain tasks easy. Â All I need is to have my pictures either cropped with rounded corners, or to have the pictures with rounded corners without the background showing. Is this at all possible? Â I found an explanation regarding this for PSE 9.0 but when I try it (Layer > Create Clipping Mask), this is grayed out and I cannot use it.
I would like to make a square with round corners with certain Radius. I use Rectangular Marque Tool with Feathering set to some value. The thing is that when I cut the shape from Layer I don't get a sharp corner but instead I have shaded corner.
My CS3 version has suddenly developed round corners to rectangular marquee selections. When I lay out the selected area using the rectangular marquee tool everything looks OK but, when I release the cursor the selected area develops round corners and for instance if I'm cropping something the area affected is incorrect.
With Gimp you can round the corners of a square or rectangle using two functions: the problem is that doing so all four corners will be rounded, while I am interested in only the two upper corners. Here's an example of what I would do.