The 3D Viewport is the most frequently used interface in Modo. It is the window into Modo's virtual 3D world. It serves many purposes, allowing you to sculpt, paint, animate, deform, move elements about, and position cameras and lights. With so many jobs to do, it's important that it be flexible as well. There are numerous functions within the 3D Viewport that allow you to customize what is seen and how it is seen, depending on the task at hand.
When Modo is opened for the first time, it opens to the default 902 Model interface with a large 3D GL viewport set to Perspective view. When examining the viewport, you see a dark grid moving in perspective off into the distance some, with another coarser light colored grid perpendicular to the dark one. The dark grid represents the ground plane, the zero position of the Y (or Up) axis. Each square of that grid represents a fixed distance. Since this grid is dynamic depending on the zoom level, a small display in the lower right corner gives you the real world equivalent measurements for each square unit, in the case above it is 50mm. The lighter grid represents Modo's Work Plane, which is also dynamic depending on your rotational orientation to the world. While the ground plane is purely for reference purposes, the Work Plane's purpose is to show you where objects get created in the 3D space. Think of it as a construction plane, dynamically adjusting to the most appropriate angle.
Also within the 3D Viewport, there are text and information overlays that give you pertinent information with regards to items visible within the viewport as well as guides to selections and the currently selected tool. All of these work together, providing important feedback to speed and enhance the overall workflow.
To get the most of the 3D views, there are also many additional controls you can directly access when necessary. In the upper left corner of the window is a small circle, called the Thumb. Next to it, there are three capsule shaped buttons. The Thumb is dark gray until a viewport becomes active in which case it turns orange. To make any viewport active, simply click anywhere within the window frame. Right-clicking on the Thumb presents you with a series of options regarding the frame. See Layout Controls for further details regarding the options.
The left-most capsule button next to the Thumb is for choosing the way the viewport sees the scene (detailed in the Open topic with navigation section below). Click on it to open a pop-up menu that allows you to choose from the available options of Perspective and various isometric views, or viewing the scene from the Camera or Lights point of view. The next button contains all the viewport display styles that visualize the geometry in different ways depending on the task at hand. The last button enables the in-viewport rendering Ray-GL, giving you a fast, fully rendered in-viewport representation of the scene. Choose from the Fast or Full options to maximize workflow efficiency.
The upper right corner has several small icons. The first three let you manipulate the view itself, move, rotate and adjust the zoom level of the active viewport. Clicking and dragging over any of the icons makes the appropriate view adjustment providing an intuitive way for manipulating the position of the viewport's virtual camera. For easier and faster viewport navigation, see the Navigation section below. The next one is the Minimize/Maximize arrow. Click to expand the active viewport to fill the entire local frame, allowing for additional viewport space to manipulate the contents. When the arrow is yellow, click it to minimize the viewport and reveal the other associated viewports. The gear contains all the available viewport customization control options. Here you can change how the geometry is represented in the viewport, control wireframe overlays and change how items in the background are displayed (items that are visible, but unselected are considered background elements), as well as set the visibility of many individual viewport elements. These options can also be accessed by hovering the mouse pointer over the target window and pressing O on the keyboard. For more information on viewport customization, see below. The tiny arrow icon to the right, is called the Widget. For more information on this control, see Layout Controls. Right-click to open a pop-up menu that allows you to select one of the Modo viewports. Selecting any of these items converts that window into the chosen viewport.
NOTE: Don't select anything unless you mean to change it, as viewport changes cannot be undone. See Customizing Your Layout for more information regarding viewport customization (and how to get back the default interface when you need to).
On the lower left of the viewport, there is an XYZ axis gizmo that provides a visual reference to the orientation of the window as well as the current work plane orientation. For orthographic views, the icon displays the axis plane the viewport windows faces toward. In perspective view, you can rotate the view and see the widget update in real time. The lower right corner has several informational text displays that dynamically update, showing the current number of selected items, channels and deformers. The GL display references the number of live polygons active in your viewport (including Sub-D surfaces) and the number at the bottom gives the real world size reference to the squares within the grid of the ground plane. The specific information displayed is controlled in the GL section of the Display Preferences.
Modo provides a number of functions to aid in the navigation of GL viewport allowing you to navigate in 3D space in various ways. Most are mouse button and keyboard combinations. Shortcuts are based on the default interface values. For additional navigation options, see Remapping in the Open topic with navigation section.
Keystroke(s) |
Action |
---|---|
Alt+left-click |
Rotate view |
Alt+middle-click |
Rotate viewport Z axis (bank) view |
Alt+right-click |
Flick Rotate (also called Free Wheeling) view slows down when mouse is released. |
Shift+Alt+left-click |
Pan View |
Shift+Alt+right-click |
Up/Down Pan only |
Ctrl+Alt+left-click |
Zoom to mouse position |
Ctrl+Alt+right-click |
Box Zoom (drag box to zoom) |
. (period) |
Zoom In |
, (comma) |
Zoom Out |
G |
Center view (Current mouse position to viewport center) |
/ |
Turntable (Spinning view of scene) |
Shift+/ |
Upright Turntable |
Mouse Wheel Scroll |
Zoom View in & out to mouse pointer |
A |
Fit (Zoom to scene extents/all Items) |
Shift+A |
Fit Selected (Zooms to selected elements) |
Ctrl+A |
Align Selected (Aligns view to current selection) |
Ctrl+Shift+A |
Fit and Align Selected (Zooms and aligns view to current selection) |
Modo provides a way to modify the visibility of object in the viewport directly. While generally you can toggle visibility of items in the Item List that changes visibility of the entire layer. The following commands allow the temporary toggling of visibility of only the selected element, including components, depending on the selection mode. Once hidden, geometry becomes uneditable. To hide a piece of geometry, select the geometry component you wish to hide and in the menu bar, go to View > Hide Selected or press H on the keyboard. To make the geometry visible again, click View > Unhide or press the U key.
NOTE: When a file is saved and re-opened later, all hidden polygons are visible.
Keystroke(s) |
Action |
---|---|
H |
Hides selected geometry (hides all if nothing is selected). |
Shift+H |
Hides unselected geometry. |
Ctrl+H |
Hide invert (toggles visibility, inverting the present state). |
U |
Makes all hidden geometry visible for the currently selected layers. |
Providing a similar function to hiding, locking allows you to fix a selection of geometry so that it is not editable, however it is still visible. Unlike hiding, locking is limited to the component selection modes. To apply a similar function to item layers, use the locking ability of the Item List or Assembly Viewport. To lock a component, select some geometry and in the menu bar, go to Edit > Lock Selected or press the J keyboard shortcut. You can unlock any locked elements in an item layer by clicking on Edit > Unlock command or by pressing I.
Keystroke(s) |
Action |
---|---|
J |
Lock selected geometry (locks all if nothing is selected). |
Shift+J |
Locks unselected geometry. |
Ctrl+J |
Lock invert (toggles locked state of all geometry). |
I |
Makes all locked geometry editable. |
While viewports have no actual camera, Modo does provide you the ability to change how a scene is viewed through the viewports. The options can be selected from the View Type menu in the upper left corner of the viewport. Click on the button to open the menu where you can choose alternate options. The following orthogonal views provide viewpoints free from perspective distortion of all the cardinal viewing planes -front, back, top, bottom, left and right.
Front Bottom
|
Back Left
|
Top
Right
|
Perspective views are similar to viewing the scene through a real-world camera, where the displays have perspective and a vanishing point. The amount of perspective distortion can be controlled in the menu bar, in System > Preferences > Display > OpenGL setting Flatness of Perspective (This is for the Perspective view only, the Camera and Light views are controlled by the item's settings). Additionally, you can view a scene from the Camera's point-of-view, mimicking the field of view settings of the item. When in the Camera mode, translucent black bars appear over the frame to represent the rendered frames aspect ratio, for when it doesn't match that of the viewport frame. Finally, there is also the Light view that displays the scene from a particular light's point-of-view, providing an easy way to see what the light is pointed at and illuminating.
NOTE: When navigating in the Camera or Light views, you are actually moving the positions of the elements within the scene.
Perspective |
Camera
|
Light
|
The Ray GL viewport option leverages Modo's render preview functionality overlaid with the standard viewport options to provide a hybrid display of the rendered scenes, where you can model and interact with the rendered scene directly. To use it, right-click the Ray GL toggle button in the top left of the viewport , enabling the function. There are three options to choose from: Fast, Full and Bake. The Fast option forgoes textures for a speedier preview of the scene, while the Full option nearly approaches the quality level of a final render but with a reduced ray amount for faster interaction. For simpler scenes, shading is near real-time, just like in the render preview, but for more complex scenes, there is a lag between edits, where the system temporarily reverts back to the standard GL view. Users can control how Ray GL updates based on options available within the RayGL Preferences available in System > Preferences > Display > Ray GL. Additionally, you can choose which elements are taken into account when rendering. For example this can be useful when you want to disable fur rendering to speed up the preview when modeling an object with complex fur.
Model courtesy of John Hayes
Modo provides a number of ways to visualize a scene using viewport styles. These are in-viewport shaders that display the geometry in specific ways, making it easier to visualize certain aspects of a model or scene. You can choose from the available options by using the Viewport Options button within the viewport (the second button from the left on the top).
Layout |
Name |
Description |
---|---|---|
|
Wireframe |
In the Wireframe drawing style only vertices and the edges that connect them to make polygons are visible. The actual polygon faces are not drawn, and as such, you can see through the model to vertices and polygon edges on the backside as well. |
|
Solid |
The Solid shading mode renders the geometry without shading. This mode is most useful when combined with a wireframe overlay, resulting in a flat rendered sketch mode. |
|
Vertex Map |
The Vertex Map shade option uses the currently selected Vertex Map to shade the model. In the case of Vertex Color maps, the color of each vertex is blended with the colors of the neighbor vertices. For Weight Maps, positive values shade red while negative values shade blue. Any vertex with a value of 0 or no value at all is shaded green. If Color and Weight type Vertex Maps are selected, the Color Vertex Map takes precedence. |
|
Shaded |
The Shaded style shows meshes with their basic material definitions such as Diffuse, Specular and Transparency. No image maps appear in the Shaded style. |
|
Texture |
The Texture style shows the mesh surface with only the most basic material attributes including any image map textures. In Texture style, RGBA images can be seen with their alpha blending them into the material beneath. However, limitations of standard Open GL force the image map to draw without shading (that is, full bright). This is a reasonable view style for 3D painting or placing image decals onto a model. The Shaded Texture style can shade the image texture but cannot use alpha channel. The Advanced view correctly alpha blends multiple image texture layers and shades them appropriately. |
|
Shaded Texture |
In the Shaded Texture view, image maps are visible as blended with the light shading effects. Due to OpenGL limitations this mode cannot show images with alpha channels, so any RGBA image appears as an opaque RGB image. To see alpha channels from the image, use the Texture, Default or Advanced view styles. |
|
Default |
The Default view allows you to see many more effects than the normal Texture view. With Default mode you can see the following types of image maps: Color, Bump, Specular, Luminous and Transparency. It blends multiple layers of each (though Bump only uses the first layer). However, the total number you actually see at a time is based on the resources of your graphics card. These resource limitations are per Shader Tree surface so if your card has 8 texture units, each Material can have up to 8 image maps. Aside from simple alpha blending, each layer's opacity is respected as well as the base material settings - so you can, for instance, set the material to be 50% transparent, then create a clip and apply it as a transparency map and paint in areas of complete transparency or complete opacity (previously referred to as Advanced GL). |
|
Advanced |
The Advanced viewport provides a more powerful rendering mechanism by using modern graphics technology. The purpose of this viewport is to be able to produce closer results to the final offline render of scenes, within an interactive manner. Supporting more functionality than the 'Default' view, the Advanced viewport supports reflections and fresnel of the Physical Shader as well as 'Ambient Occlusion' and Direct Light shadows and has its own viewport antialiasing. These functions can be enabled and controlled in the Viewport options panel (covered below under the Advanced Options section). A graphics card with at least OpenGL 3.2 support is required for Advanced Viewport, and the VBO mode must be enabled. |
|
Gooch Tone Shading |
The Gooch shading mode is a vertex shading algorithm that displays the geometry using a technique known as tone shading. Rather than relying on the traditional light to dark shadow style shading, which can obscure parts of the model while working, tone mapping represents the curvature of the geometry, shading warm-to-cool where the warm areas are those that would traditionally be lit and the cool areas are those that would normally be in shadow. This shading mode allows you to check the surface of your model for proper contouring while still seeing the entire mesh evenly lit. |
|
Cel Shading |
The Cel Shading style creates a stepped shading on the model to appear as if it were a cartoon with a fixed number of shading zones. |
Reflection |
The Reflection Shader displays your geometry as if it were fully reflective. This shader uses a cubic reflection map, and mixes in some of the original material properties with a small amount of shading to properly show object contours. This mode is very useful when performing visual review of a models surface as it assists in finding surface irregularities. |
Under the viewport Styles menu there is an option to save a viewport Preset allowing you to capture all the current viewport settings and easily recall them at a later time. When the command is invoked, the following panel opens up.
In the Name input field you specify a title for the Preset. This is the name that appears in the menu once saved for later recall. The option toggles represent the various option as defined in the associated viewport Options panel (covered below), allowing you to control specifically which setting is recalled with the saved preset. Directly under the Save Preset option is an additional command allowing you to Delete any user created viewport preset.
Allows to further customize the display of elements within a viewport, Modo provides a multitude of options available to control various aspects. The default interfaces apply varieties of these options for their custom workspaces, however, over the years they have been fine-tuned to the degree that they rarely need adjusting. When the need does arise, you can easily access the display menu options by clicking on the gear icon in the upper right corner of the viewport, or moving the pointer over the target viewport and pressing O to open the pop-up menu. You can dismiss the window by clicking anywhere in the interface.
NOTE: Edits are made per-viewport.
The following options are available for modification.
• View Type: choose from the various view types covered in the 3D (OpenGL) Viewport section: Top, Bottom, Front, Back, Left, Right, Perspective, Camera and Light.
• Orientation: for the orthogonal views only, you can control upright rotation angle in 90° increments.
• Overlay Drawing: for custom draw items, such as locators, cameras and lights (that have no inherent geometry) this option enables an X-Ray style of viewing, meaning you can see these elements through polygons when enabled.
• Enable Silhouette: when this option is enabled (the default state), any Mesh Item designated in its display properties as Show as Silhouette displays as a flat solid shape with no interior details. This option should be thought of as a global enabler only, where the actual display of the silhouette itself is determined by the options of the item's Display properties.
• Enable Onion Skinning: when this option is enabled, any Actor with Onion Skinning defined for it displays as designated in the 3D Viewport (the default state).
• Topology Mode: this option aids the process of retopologizing a mesh, sometimes also called simply topo. This is the process of converting a high resolution mesh to a low resolution mesh by creating new polygons against the high resolution mesh set as a background element. Generally, this process creates intersecting geometry that is difficult to see. Enabling the Topology Mode: this option forces the drawing of vertices and edges to always draw in front of background elements in the scene. Polygons are displayed as semi-transparent shapes with solid blue edges. Vertices are enlarged for easier visibility.
• Show Viewport Controls and Information: this toggle controls the display of all the viewport element overlays, such as the axis widget, move, scale and Rotate tool's and the information overlays. When the controls are disabled, you can press O while hovering the mouse pointer over the target viewport to open the viewport options panel again.
• Replicators: this field allows you to control the shaded display of any Replicator in a scene. You can adjust this setting to never (None), or always (All) display shaded Replicators, or only when a Replicator Item is active (Selected). Otherwise, the Replicator clones are displayed as bounding boxes. For more information, see Replicators.
• GL Background: you can choose from several viewport-specific GL background options for controlling what is seen in the background of the viewport.
• None- displays no background, only the defined viewport color is visible.
• Gradient- displays a gray gradient shading that is multiplied over the viewport color.
• Environment- displays the settings as determined by the Environment Item of the Shader Tree, simulating the rendered output.
• Image- you can define a custom image for use as a viewport background. When this option is selected, a file requester opens where you can select or navigate to the appropriate image. For best results, image should be a spherical projection.
• GL Reflection: you can choose from several viewport-specific GL reflection options for controlling the display of reflective surfaces.
• None: displays no reflection, ignoring surface material settings.
• Gradient: displays a gray gradient shading on reflective surfaces.
• Environment: displays the settings as determined by the Environment item of the Shader Tree, simulating the rendered output.
• Image: you can define a custom image for use as reflections (only applies to custom reflective surfaces, or Reflection viewport display mode. When this option is selected, a file requester opens, where you can select or navigate to the appropriate image. For best results, the image should be a spherical projection.
• Same as Environment: reflection options are determined by the GL Background settings.
• Camera Item: in the case of multiple cameras in a scene, where the viewport is set to Camera view type, this option determines which camera item controls the viewport. Selecting alternate cameras changes the viewport to that camera's point of view.
NOTE: Navigating in the viewport while in this mode physically moves the camera in the scene.
• Light Item: In the case of multiple lights in a scene, where the viewport is set to Light view type, this option determines which light item controls the viewport. Selecting an alternate light changes the viewport to that light's point of view.
• Independent Center/Scale/Rotate: to make viewport navigation easy, it is sometimes desirable to link or unlink grouped 3D Viewports, so when changing the position, size and angle of the viewport view, associated viewports move in sync with the active viewport. These three toggles allow you to control the syncing of the view properties center, scale and rotate.
• Master Viewport: Determines the linking of viewports, on a per viewport basis, options include Orthographic, which links all associated orthographic viewports, and Perspective, which links associated perspective views (does not include camera and light views).
For scenes using Front type texture projection method in the environment item, either from a camera or light, the background imagery options control the display of the projected environment image in the viewport. To use it, apply an image to the Environment item in the Shader Tree, and in its associated Texture Locator, assign the Front projection type, specify a camera or light if necessary. For more information on Texture Locators, see the Texture Locator section.
• Invert: inverts the RGB values of the projected image, producing a negative effect.
• Overlay: when enabled, this option draws the projected image on top of the viewport, obscuring its contents. When set as such, changing the Transparency setting below allows you to see the viewports contents.
• Contrast: this option adjusts the contrast of the projected viewport image, modifying the visual difference between light and dark values in the image. Positive values increase the contrast, while negative values decrease it.
• Brightness: this option adjusts the brightness of the projected viewport image. Positive values brighten or lighten the image, while negative values darken it.
• Transparency: this option changes the opacity of the viewport projected image. When set to Overlay, it affects the visibility of items in the scene through the image. When overlay is disabled, this value reveals the settings of the background options.
• Oscillate: in the Perspective view type, you can enable the Oscillate option. Then, using Alt+right-click , drag the cursor, moving the view. When you let go of the mouse button, Modo continues to bounce back and forth, oscillating over the previous mouse movement. This is useful when you want to view a model in motion.
• Trackball Rotation: you have several options for orbiting behavior when navigating the viewport. Trackball style navigation is a common way to rotate the view of a scene, as if the viewport itself was a giant trackball, allowing multiple axes rotation based on the mouse's viewport position. Disabling this option limits viewport rotations to only two axes. The options are:
• No: disables trackball style rotation in favor of standard upright orbiting.
• Yes: enables trackball rotation for the specific viewport.
• Default: uses the preference setting available in System > Preferences > Display > OpenGL > Viewport Rotation
• Orbit Selected: when this option is enabled, Modo automatically orbits around the selected element, using the selection's bounding box center as the center of rotation.
• Hot Scrubbing: when enabled, animated items in the scene update continuously when dragging the Timeline, producing a smooth motion. When disabled, items only update when the mouse pauses, or isn't moving, providing slightly faster performance.
• Enable Deformers: this toggle allows viewports to display the results of animated morph and Vertex Map deformers in the viewport. This option is typically disabled for the modeling viewports, and enabled for animation viewports.
NOTE: The Enable Silhouette, Topology Mode and Show Weightmaps options are all incompatible with each other and therefore cannot all be enabled at the same time. The Show Weightmaps option supersedes the Enable Silhouette option and the Topology Mode options supersedes both.
• Show Lights: toggles the visibility of the light item representations in the current viewport. Typically disabled for modeling views.
• Show Cameras: toggles the visibility of the camera item representations in the current viewport. Typically disabled for modeling views.
• Show Locators: toggles the visibility of the locator item representations in the current viewport.
• Show Texture Locators: toggles the visibility of the texture locator item representations in the current viewport.
• Show Meshes: toggles the visibility of Mesh Items in the current viewport.
• Show Instances: toggles the visibility of instance items in the current viewport.
• Show Pivots/Centers: Visibility for pivot and center representations can be determined by these criteria:
• None- only shows the pivot/center when in Pivots/Centers selection mode.
• Selected- shows the pivot/center when any item layer is selected in the Item List.
• All- Always shows the pivot/center for all items.
• Show Work Plane: toggles the visibility of the Work Plane in the current viewport. (keyboard shortcut is Num Pad *).
• Show Grid: toggles the visibility of the ground plane grid at the 0 position of the up axis.
• Show Backdrop: toggles the visibility of any Backdrop Image items in the scene. For more information on Backdrop Images, see Modeling with Images.
• Show Selections: toggles the visibility of selection highlighting.
• Show Selection Normals: when enabled, this option displays normals for any selected polygon(s), displayed as a small dashed line pointing outward from the center of the polygon. Normals represent the facing direction for polygons.
• Show Selected Filling: toggles the visibility of the selection highlight overlay.
• Show Selected Outline: toggles the visibility of the selection highlighting outline.
• Show Selection Rollovers: toggles the visibility of selection rollover pre-highlighting.
The Advanced Viewport options control the settings applied only to the 'Advanced' viewport display style.
• Show Shadows: This option toggles visibility of Direct Light shadows in the viewport. Note that Point, Directional, and Spot Lights generate more accurate shadows than Area and Cylinder lights do.
• Visibility: The Visibility setting controls the visibility of items in the viewport when set as Advanced. When set as the 'Render' option, the Render visibility setting on each item determines viewport visibility, and when set to the 'Viewport' option, an items visibility is determined by its Items list visibility (as controlled by the eye column of the Items list).
• Enable Ambient Occlusion: This option toggles rendering of screen-space Ambient Occlusion, an effect that darkens recessed areas of a surface, producing a look similar to global illumination light scattering. When enabled, additional options become available to fine tune the look of the Ambient Occlusion effect. Note that this effect is completely independent of the 'Ambient Occlusion' Shader Tree layer and not representative of how it renders, but adds an additional visualization possibility to enhance the look of the GL viewport models.
• Radius: The Radius value determines the size of the resulting Ambient Occlusion effect.
• Bias: The Bias value adjust the shading falloff curve, lower values darken the Ambient Occlusion, while higher values lighten the effect.
• Intensity: The Intensity value controls the overall strength (darkness) of the Ambient Occlusion effect. The higher the Intensity value the darker the result.
• Blur Radius: The Blur Radius value can be applied to soften the resulting Ambient Occlusion effect, producing a smoother overall result, but keep in mind the greater this value, the greater the performance cost.
• Antialiasing: The Antialaising determines an amount of subsampling of viewport drawing that smooths the jagged display of the Advanced viewport.
• Transparency: The Transparency controls defines the display of transparent surfaces. Off disables transparency drawing, Fast does simple depth sorted transparency and Correct does depth sorted transparency with refraction, producing a more accurate result.
The following options allow you to control the display of elements that are in the foreground, meaning they are selected in the Items list. Background layers are those that are visible, but not selected.
• Shading Style: you can choose from the available view styles covered above: Wireframe, Solid, Shaded, Texture, Shaded Texture, Default, Advanced, Gooch, Cel and Reflection Shading.
• Wireframe Overlay: determines the style of geometry wireframe display. You can adjust the colors of the wireframe using the preference setting in System >Preferences > Display > Colors. Once a color scheme is created in Preferences and saved as a named preset, it must be applied to the active viewport with the menu bar command View > Viewport Color Scheme.
• None: no wireframe display. (/)
• Uniform: by default this is a white wireframe outline. (Shift+/)
• Colored: by default this is a black wireframe outline. (Ctrl+/)
• Wireframe Opacity: controls the opacity of the wireframe overlay display.
• Wireframe Color:
• Vertex Map: defines which type of Vertex Map is displayed when in the Vertex Map viewport.
• Selection: displays the most recent Vertex Map selection.
• Weight: favors Weight Maps for display.
• Vertex Color: favors vertex color maps for display.
• Smooth Shade: this toggle overrides the material Smoothing setting, only changing how smoothing is displayed in the viewport, not the rendered output. When disabled, individual polygons shade flat, appearing faceted. When enabled, polygons shade according to the material Smoothing setting.
• Show Weightmaps: when enabled, selected Weight Maps are visible as overlays to the shaded elements in the 3D Viewport in Default viewport display style. This includes the automatic weights associated to bones and deformers.
• Show PSUB Masks: toggles the visibility of the sculpting masks in the viewport when working with multi-resolution sculpting. When a masks visibility is disabled, the mask still affects the target unless the Enable Mask option is inactive. For more information, see Sculpting Masks.
• Show UV Boundaries: toggles visibility of UV boundaries in the 3D Viewport. These display as thin purple lines overlaid on the surface, representing the outline of each UV island. The default color can be changed in the Color Preferences section.
• Show Geometry Boundaries: toggles visibility of Geometry boundaries, These display as a thin green line on any open edges of a surface. Especially useful in highlighting hidden surface discontinuities.
• Independent Point Size: this is a per-viewport override for the display size of selected vertices. When enabled, you can specify the actual display size with the Point Size option.
• Point Size: this option determines the display size of selected vertices when the Independent Point Size option is enabled. Values are in screen pixels.
• Show Vertices: toggles the visibility of unselected vertices (selected vertices are always visible, unless Show Selection is disabled).
• Show Cages: toggles the visibility of the Subdivision Surface Cage representation. This can be considered the original polygons that were smoothed.
• Show Guides: toggles the visibility of guide lines that draw between the subdivision limit surface and the cage geometry.
• Show Indices: toggles the visibility of the component index values display. Each number represents the particular component index. Visibility can be especially helpful when working with Geometry Constraints, where Constraints require specific index values for input.
• Show Weight Values: toggles the visibility of Weight Map value display. A numeric value representing the current vertex weight amount displays next to each selected vertex in the 3D Viewport. Weight Map usage is covered in the Open topic with navigation section.
• Enable Independent Drawing: the Display Viewport allows you to define custom display options for each item layer. By default, the Enable Independent Drawing option is enabled and these custom drawing options display in all viewports. When disabled, all custom drawing options are ignored for active meshes.
The following options allow you to control the display of item layers that are in the background, meaning that they are visible in the Items list, but unselected (not highlighted).
• Make Inactive Same as Active: when enabled, this option overrides all settings of the Inactive Meshes options panel and all background item layers display as foreground elements.
• Make Inactive Invisible: when enabled, all item layers that are visible according to the visibility column of the Items list, but unselected don't show in the 3D Viewport. This makes it easy to solo a single layer by simply selecting it without affecting the rendered image or requiring multiple layers' visibility to be toggled.
• Shading Style: you can choose from the available view styles covered above: Wireframe, Solid, Shaded, Texture, Shaded Texture, Default, Advanced, Gooch, Cel and Reflection Shading.
• Wireframe Overlay: determines the style of geometry wireframe display. You can adjust the colors of the wireframe using the preference setting "System >Preferences" and then "Display > Colors". Once a color scheme is created in preferences and saved as a named preset, it must be applied to the active viewport with the menu bar command "View > Viewport Color Scheme".
• None- No Wireframe display. (Shortcut = '/')
• Uniform- By default this is a white wireframe outline. (Shortcut = 'Shift+/')
• Colored- By default this is a black wireframe outline. (Shortcut = 'Ctrl+/')
• Wireframe Opacity: Controls the opacity of the wireframe overlay display.
• Wireframe Color:
• Vertex Map: defines which type of Vertex Map is displayed when in the Vertex Map viewport.
• Selection: displays the most recent Vertex Map selection.
• Weight: favors Weight Maps for display.
• Vertex Color: favors vertex color maps for display.
• Smooth Shade: this toggle overrides the material Smoothing setting, only changing how smoothing is displayed in the viewport, not the rendered output. When disabled, individual polygons shade flat, appearing faceted. When enabled, polygons shade according to the material Smoothing setting.
• Show Weightmaps: when enabled, selected Weight Maps are visible as overlays to the shaded elements in the 3D Viewport in Default viewport display style. This includes the automatic weights associated to bones and deformers.
• Show PSUB Masks: toggles the visibility of the sculpting masks in the viewport when working with multi-resolution sculpting. When a masks visibility is disabled, the mask still affects the target unless the Enable Mask option is inactive. For more information, see Sculpting Masks.
• Show UV Boundaries: toggles visibility of UV boundaries in the 3D Viewport. These display as thin purple lines overlaid on the surface, representing the outline of each UV island. The default color can be changed in the Color Preferences section.
• Show Geometry Boundaries: toggles visibility of Geometry boundaries, These display as a thin green line on any open edges of a surface. Especially useful in highlighting hidden surface discontinuities.
• Apply Current Morph: When a Morph Map is selected, the Morph is applied to all visible meshes, in active layers and inactive layers. The Apply Current Morph option toggles the display of Morphs for background (inactive) layers.
• Independent Point Size: this is a per-viewport override for the display size of selected vertices. When enabled, you can specify the actual display size with the Point Size option.
• Point Size: this option determines the display size of selected vertices when the Independent Point Size option is enabled. Values are in screen pixels.
• Show Vertices: toggles the visibility of unselected vertices (selected vertices are always visible, unless Show Selection is disabled).
• Show Cages: toggles the visibility of the Subdivision Surface Cage representation. This can be considered the original polygons that were smoothed.
• Show Guides: toggles the visibility of guide lines that draw between the subdivision limit surface and the cage geometry.
• Enable Independent Drawing: the Display viewport allows you to define custom display options per item layer. By default, these custom drawing options display in all viewports. However, when the Enable Independent Drawing option is enabled, all custom drawing options are ignored for active meshes.