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That's the final result i'd like to achieve but more round

Sorry, i'm starting with blender...

Miki
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    The geometry in the third picture is not a cylinder, it’s an ellipsoid with rounded edges. Can you post a picture of what you want it to look like in the end? – TheLabCat Mar 04 '21 at 00:05
  • sure, i am really having trouble with it – Miki Mar 11 '21 at 12:35

1 Answers1

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The following two methods might help to fix your problem:

Method 1

Scale down a cylinder to be the size of your current mesh. After that go in Edit Mode, select all of your mesh by pressing A, and then Subdivide. Set the number of cuts to three. Once that is done, add a Subdivision Surface Modifier and set it to 2 or 3 (Don't forget to add Loop Cuts on the top and bottom of the mesh by hitting Ctrl+R and then dragging. Otherwise you will get a very round mesh) If you are in cycles you can set the feature set to experimental and enable adaptive subdivision in the Subdivision Surface modifier and then in the material properties go to Settings and then set bump only to displacement and bump to save render times.

Then give that cylinder the same material you gave to your current mesh.

Method 2

If you want your current mesh to have the material, then your problem is that your UV's are stretched. Make sure you have given seams on the right places. To make sure there is no stretch, go to the UV Editing Workspace and in Edit Mode select your entire mesh. Then on the side panel on the left, go to Overlays and press display stretch (The colours any other than almost dark blue like cyan or green mean there is stretch).

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If there is any stretching, you will have to first go to Object Mode and then press Ctrl+A and click Apply Scale. Come back to Edit Mode, then select your entire mesh and press U > Unwrap. If the stretching is still visible you would have to add more seams at the right place and then hit U > Unwrap again.

Yousuf Chaudhry
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  • I don't think that subdividing the mesh even further and also adding a subdivision modifier on top of that, is a helpful recommendation...? Why do you think this shape needs billions of polygons? More than 3 subdivision levels is overkill in most cases. – brockmann Mar 04 '21 at 12:47
  • @brockmann I thought of this but I still wrote this so there won't be lack of detail for the displacement to work properly on the mesh. I'll edit the answer to be one step lower in te subdiv modifier. And I also did it because I asked to add a cylinder which is normally very low-poly. – Yousuf Chaudhry Mar 04 '21 at 12:58
  • For displacement, enable 'Adaptive': https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/latest/render/cycles/object_settings/adaptive_subdiv.html and https://blender.stackexchange.com/questions/123914/2-8-adaptive-subdivision – brockmann Mar 04 '21 at 13:04
  • @brockmann Oh yes I forgot about adaptive subdivision. – Yousuf Chaudhry Mar 04 '21 at 13:06
  • Hey, so i checked the UV map and it is an absolute mess. I did everything you said but i don't know where to create the seams. How could i fix this? – Miki Mar 11 '21 at 12:33
  • @Miki If you are using method 1 (In which you have to create your own cylinder) Press U and press Cylinder projection. In the answer you have edited you say that the mesh is round so then you have to follow method 1 that I have stated. – Yousuf Chaudhry Mar 11 '21 at 14:19
  • I've posted a screenshot of the UV unwrapping and the ideal result i would like to have. Do u think that's the best way to do it? – Miki Mar 11 '21 at 14:24
  • @Miki The UVs have stretching at the edges. I say you check what I said in method 1. I is to remove your current mesh and instead make a new cylinder. The rest is explained there. – Yousuf Chaudhry Mar 11 '21 at 14:26