Several members have asked how to produce the optical illusion effect where-by a blend has no overlap. I have produced the following. It's a bit long winded but I hope it helps
Egg
Printable View
Several members have asked how to produce the optical illusion effect where-by a blend has no overlap. I have produced the following. It's a bit long winded but I hope it helps
Egg
Several members have asked how to produce the optical illusion effect where-by a blend has no overlap. I have produced the following. It's a bit long winded but I hope it helps
Egg
2
3
.
.
.... non exact overlay of blended objects on a circle. I did the same and got the same results. I think its to do with the distribution around the arc.(ie "rotate along curve").
If you make a blend between 2 lines and attach to curve, the start and end lines overlay exactly. If you the do "rotate along curve" there is a descrepency on the overlap. However the 2 overlapping lines still intersect on the intersection with the circle. I get a 0.8 degree shift.
Why this is I'm not sure.
Egg
/
I tried to launch the new users in another topic, and, reading news on the forum found this...good, good, good (I said it thrice, so it must be true)
Please, if you want to, visit the Youn Person's Guide topic from time to time and inspire!
Thanks. [img]/infopop/emoticons/icon_biggrin.gif[/img]
These were originally produced by the Swedish artist Oscar Reutersvard. I have reproduced them using XX. This one was produced by creating the cube shape (grouped) and blended along a triangle. You can actually produce a real 3D version of this which is correct when viewed at the correct angle.