The Squircle (still strugelling with this word ;-)) script is really useful.
Taking a closer look at available photo material it seems
that the 4 edges start almost completely rounded at
the bottom sharpening towards the tip. The tip itself
being a surface of its own filling the gap between
the four surfaces.
Hi Tom,
perhaps this method will give you the rounded peak needed.
I started with a square and added mid points to each side.
Then selected the mid points and scaled to give the desired curvature,
Offset copies made and added point for peak then lofted as per Burr's video.
Added a fillet running diagonal from corner to corner.
The other diagonal same radii but requires a second fillet set for the peak area to be slightly smaller.
hope that makes sense.
Cheers
Barry
Since it seems the surgarloaf is more of an "artistic grind" and not really a mathematically produced result, you can change the base shape and all the angles of the surface structure, along with Blend parameters to "Eyeball" some various results... All smooth.
Uh I guess I mixed up your names ... Yes, the Video shows Burrman using
the Superellipse script and as I did not find this one (I am using the "Squircle")
I wondered about the differnces.
About February 2022, a different squircle, using a different math formula, was created, the Fernandez-Guasti squircle. (Later in above link.)
This version is not a subset of superellipse2d. (?)
- Brian
I looked up the pronunciation of squircle. Combine the rodent squirrel with ircle.
(still hasn't made it into spellchecker :-)
On the first picture of this thread and in the video we see, the Sugarloaf Cabochon have 4 faces with edges.
With the video, I discover the render of this cut, that I see very rarely in stores.
Very nice cut...
Due to your kind collaboration this thread turned into a nice
compilation of how to achieve one goal by different means -
thank you all !!
As one contributor wrote, the shape of a "squircle" is aesthetically
very appealing. I wanted to apply this theme of "squaring the circle"
to the whole shape, starting with a circle at the bottom morphing
into a slightly rounded square at the top. The how to is attached
below.
Reproduced a close copy of Toms cab, using his images to reproduce curves.
Note that the two "acorn" shaped curves must be trimmed apart at the North and South poles, into 4 curves, for network to work. (Or kept separate during their creation.)
One-half "acorn" curve was created with two blends. A horizontal line segment was placed at the North pole, and a vertical line segment was placed at the squircle intersect point, and a blend done between. A second blend was done from said curve, down to a horizontal line segment at the south pole. Join for one curve.
Mirror and rotate for other 3 acorn half curves.
Rounded square, squircle, and lower circle curves were also created. The lower circle had to be a bit larger than the sketch IMHO.
Select all 7 curves, and do network.
Still attempting to load my old purchased copy of Keyshot 6.