How to create doughnut style flooring?
Hi guys,
Again I have a question. I have attached a perspective map I am working on at the moment. This is based on an old black and white map depicting a tower. I will attach that picture below as well. If you look at the tower toward the top (of the original black and white picture) you will see a floor that has a doughnut style floor where the main supporting column passes through. I do not know if it is possible to create this with CC3+. Maybe someone can tell me how to do it if it is possible?
Again I have a question. I have attached a perspective map I am working on at the moment. This is based on an old black and white map depicting a tower. I will attach that picture below as well. If you look at the tower toward the top (of the original black and white picture) you will see a floor that has a doughnut style floor where the main supporting column passes through. I do not know if it is possible to create this with CC3+. Maybe someone can tell me how to do it if it is possible?
Comments
This requires a flooring that circulates the outer floor but leaves a large hole in the center for the bell mechanism to be worked by pulling ropes. All I am looking to do is create a 3D circular flooring that is a doughnut.
I don't know if I am explaining myself properly. I hope you can understand what I am getting at.
Set your sheet and layer to floor
Set your color to #6
Right click the circle drawing button (on the right side of your screen). Select the ellipse tool.
Draw the desired shape of the hole onto your floor
Add the Color Key effect to the floor sheet
The color key effect makes a hole anywhere you draw a shape with color #6 (or what ever color you set on the effect setting)
Still can't seem to make it work. I have created the ellipse but it is just a thin line on the floor. It has not cut away anything in the floor.
???
Where do you learn all this stuff? :)
So, is that transparent now?
If this were a roof/upper floor of a building would you see what you had put on the floor below?