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From: Michael Gibson
Hi klaudio,
> For example like this, you want to select all faces on the top to use
> Inset, no way but to just pick them individually.
That's a pretty unusual example, because I would usually expect to see the fillet placed after doing the inset, not before.
But just as you described if you do a little bit of planning you can solve that problem and not be required to do individual picks if you use the window selection method before doing the filleting. That way there aren't little fillet surfaces in the way and then assign a name or style to those faces which will persist after filleting. Then they can be selected by one click in the scene browser and you are not required to pick them with individual clicks.
- Michael
From: Rainydaylover (DIMITRI)
Thanks for the detailed explanation Michael, I would never imagine that there is such a way of selecting similar items in a scene! : -)
From: VG (VEGASGUITARS)
That's so cool - great to know how that works.
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