CLO Centre d'aide
CLO Centre d'aide
So the right hand image is your workspace, correct? It looks like the waistband is a double layer and the layers are back to back, as they would be IRL. The chainstich provided with CLO is set up...
It usually means you're trying to create or copy something outside a pattern outline. E.g. if it's an internal line, it has to be unambiguously associated with a pattern, so initially place it comp...
https://support.clo3d.com/hc/en-us/profiles/387858256974-viauniversity, I didn't try, is the issue that you can't trace the outline of a hole? (I think that's happened to me.) It might help to draw...
These are called baselines. They are pattern markings that may convey info, or may have been part of the original construction, but don't effect the simulation in any way. You can hide them in th...
crbn, Curious effect, I haven't really seen a simulation do the wave before. CLO doesn't do very well with turned back edges except when they're truly quite square. It looks like you have a facin...
virtuallytrendy, What about forcing the behavior you want with some tacks with non-zero thread length? You could add a tack between the fold points of the two welts at about the position of the sl...
brandalliance, the thing about normals, is they are just shading, not geometry. As such it's always possible for the eye to see them in reverse--is it popping out or sinking in? Looking at your h...
It's similar to making edits in the 2D window. The mesh changes immediately and the 3D window shows that, but the ways the sewing relations and fabric physics pull those pieces doesn't happen unti...
For comparison, typically a small edit does not reset the pattern, just causes a local adjustment to the pattern shape in the 3D window
Have you tried applying knit cotton jersey as the fabric? There certainly is French terry that's the correct weight for t-shirts, but more often it's a sweatshirt weight fabric, and the CLO preset...