Rhino requires some unique considerations when preparing 3D print files. Learn how to prepare your Rhino files for 3D printing. Read now.
I'm not sure if it fits to my project... I'm concerned with surfaces with both conditions: curved parts and sharp edges (as you can achieve lofting one degree curves). I join a picture, it might be easier to see what I mean. The solution you offered me is leading to a faceted ...
In #1, you are PURPOSELY creating noise and imperfections (in a way you control) to hide the accidental noise and imperfections inherent in 3D printing. If you put enough edges on a face, the human eye stops trying to find small patterns and just calls it 'complicated'. If you don't, ...
when trying to split this surface with some curves, the output is surfaces but also polysurfaces where this edge is (after joining them since they were in two parts instead of one). the workaround, only for symmetrical cases like this, was to check this edge for intersection with all the...