Thank you so much! I am going to pin this so others can see the work-around. There are 2 solutions. You might see the dashed lines because of the hidden line feature. 1 - See screenshot in link drive.google.com/file/d/1hEjqC8OXgNCFjYAdiURsS1BSZJ99kojV/view?usp=sharing Make the hidden line color the same as your edge line color, but make sure it's the smallest line weight. So for example, Hidden line = 1.00, Edge lines = 2.00, Silhouette Lines = 5 Also, if you want your silhouette to "pop" more, you can make it a slightly darker hue compared to the other colors. or 2 - Turn off hidden lines Hope this helps!
You have a couple options 1 - print to Rhino PDF. Select vector. Select display. Line weights to match display. 2 - make 2d and make sure the curves are visible in your display options. Modify the lineweights and print with the same options as #1. 3 - make 2d and export to illustrator.
theres a dashed line around my silhouette for some reason and idk how to fix it, i copied the exact settings
Thank you so much! I am going to pin this so others can see the work-around.
There are 2 solutions. You might see the dashed lines because of the hidden line feature.
1 - See screenshot in link
drive.google.com/file/d/1hEjqC8OXgNCFjYAdiURsS1BSZJ99kojV/view?usp=sharing
Make the hidden line color the same as your edge line color, but make sure it's the smallest line weight. So for example, Hidden line = 1.00, Edge lines = 2.00, Silhouette Lines = 5
Also, if you want your silhouette to "pop" more, you can make it a slightly darker hue compared to the other colors.
or
2 - Turn off hidden lines
Hope this helps!
😍😍😍👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
what about exporting these images as vector graphics? is it possible? retaining all of the lineweight, color etc. settings
You have a couple options
1 - print to Rhino PDF. Select vector. Select display. Line weights to match display.
2 - make 2d and make sure the curves are visible in your display options. Modify the lineweights and print with the same options as #1.
3 - make 2d and export to illustrator.