Blender For Dummies. Jason van Gumster
really quite handy: You can use Blender’s workspaces to your advantage. By default, Blender launches when you’re in the Layout workspace, which is a decent general purpose workspace that you can use to get a lot done. However, the Layout workspace isn’t specifically geared for modeling. If you switch to the Modeling workspace (click the Modeling tab at the top of the Blender window), Blender automatically toggles Edit mode for your selected objects.
As Figure 4-2 shows, the Modeling workspace doesn’t really look all that different from the Layout workspace. It’s basically the same area configuration, minus the Timeline at the bottom and with a little more space for the Properties editor. That said, there’s a lot of value in using the right workspace for the job. A good workflow would be to select the object you want to work on in the Layout workspace and then jump over to the Modeling workspace (you can get there by hotkey using Ctrl+PageDown) to edit the components of your model in Edit mode. And after you’re done, you can pop back over to the Layout workspace (Ctrl+PageUp) to pick another object to work on in Object mode.
Selecting vertices, edges, and faces
Regardless of how you get into Edit mode, once you’re there the cube changes color and dots form at each of the cube’s corners. Each dot is a vertex. The line that forms between two vertices is an edge. A face in Blender is a polygon that has been formed by three or more connecting edges.
In the past, faces in Blender and other applications were limited to only three-sided and four-sided polygons, often referred to as tris (pronounced like tries) and quads. Since that time, Blender — like many other programs — gained support for something called an ngon that can have a virtually limitless number of sides. But don’t let Blender’s ngon functionality go to your head. There still are some limitations and caveats, as covered in the “A word on ngons” sidebar later in this chapter. Generally, you should think of ngons as a “process” tool. With some exceptions, like architectural models, a finished model should only consist of just three- and four-sided faces. In fact, most detailed character models are made almost completely with quads and an occasional triangle, and all 3D geometry is reduced to triangles when it gets to your computer hardware.FIGURE 4-2: The Modeling workspace gives you quick access to Edit mode and a screen layout that’s more specifically geared for modeling.
Two visual cues in the Blender interface clue you in to what selection mode you’re using. First, for Vertex Select mode, you can see the individual vertices in the mesh. Second, as Figure 4-3 shows, three new buttons appear in the 3D Viewport’s header when you’re in Edit mode. The button on the left (it has an icon of a cube with a dot over one corner) is enabled, indicating that you’re in Vertex Select mode.
FIGURE 4-3: The Edit mode Select buttons.
To the right of the Vertex Select button is a button displaying an icon of a cube with a highlighted edge. Click this button to activate Edge Select mode. When you do, the vertices are no longer visible on your mesh. Clicking the last button in this block, which has an icon of a cube with one side marked in solid, activates Face Select mode. When Face Select mode is active, vertices aren’t visible, and each polygon in your mesh can be selected as a single unit.
Now, you may notice that the selection mode buttons are blocked together, kind of like they can be used together. That’s because they can! In any given Edit mode session you can have multiple selection modes active at the same time. Simply Shift+left-click the selection mode buttons to get this functionality. Some Blender modelers like to have Vertex Select and Edge Select modes active at the same time to speed up their workflow. This combined selection mode gives them immediate control at the vertex and edge level, and you can easily select the faces by Box-selecting across two edges.
Blender also has some handy hotkeys for quickly switching between vertex, edge, and face selection. They’re the numbers 1, 2, and 3 across the top of your keyboard (not the Numpad!). A handy mnemonic to help you remember which key belongs to which selection mode is to remember how many vertices make up each one. A vertex is a single unit, so the hotkey for Vertex Select is 1. It takes two vertices to make an edge, so the hotkey for Edge Select is 2. And a face consists of three or more vertices, so the hotkey for Face Select is 3. You can activate Combo Select by holding Shift while pressing any of these hotkeys (for example, if you’re in Vertex Select and you also want to be in Edge Select, press Shift+2). Figure 4-4 shows the default cube in each of the select modes, as well as a Combo Select mode.
FIGURE 4-4: Vertex Select, Edge Select, Face Select, and Combo Select modes.
This menu is large, but about halfway down, under the label of Mesh Edit Mode, there are a series of check boxes. One of which is a check box somewhat vaguely labeled Center. Enable that check box and you should see a small dot appear at the center of your faces while you’re in Face Select mode. That should give you a little bit more of a visual cue to indicate which mode you’re in.
FIGURE 4-5: Use the Viewport Overlays roll-out menu to enable face centers so it’s easier to tell what selection mode you’re using.
By default, the first time you tab into Edit mode on a newly added object, all vertices/edges/faces (sometimes called components) are selected. Selecting things in Edit mode works just like selecting anywhere else:
Left-click any component to select it.
Select and deselect multiple components by Shift+left-clicking them.
Select all components by pressing A.
Deselect all components by pressing Alt+A or clicking in an empty space in the 3D Viewport.
Use one of the select tools from the Toolbar (left-click and hold on the Select tool icon in the Toolbar to see all available