Deleting & Dissolving

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode
Panel:Toolbar ‣ Tools ‣ Mesh Tools ‣ Remove: Delete
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete

These tools can be used to remove components.

Delete

Reference

Hotkey:X, Delete

Deletes selected vertices, edges, or faces. This operation can also be limited to:

Vertices
Delete all vertices in current selection, removing any faces or edges they are connected to.
Edges
Deletes any edges in the current selection. Removes any faces that the edge shares with it.
Faces
Removes any faces in current selection.
Only Edges & Faces
Limits the operation to only selected edges and adjacent faces.
Only Faces
Removes faces, but edges within the face selection are retained.

Dissolve

Dissolve operations are also accessed from the delete menu. Dissolve will remove the geometry and fill in the surrounding geometry. Instead of removing the geometry, which may leave holes that you have to fill in again.

Removes selected geometry, but without creating holes, effectively turning the selection into a single n-gon. Dissolve works slightly different based on if you have edges, faces or vertices selected. You can add detail where you need it, or quickly remove it where you do not.

Dissolve Vertices

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete ‣ Dissolve Vertices

Remove the vertex, merging all surrounding faces. In the case of two edges, merging them into a single edge.

Face Split
When dissolving vertices into surrounding faces, you can often end up with very large, uneven n-gons. The face split option limits dissolve to only use the corners of the faces connected to the vertex.
Tear Boundaries
Split off face corners instead of merging faces.

Examples

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_dissolve-examples.png

1) Original mesh. 2) Face Split: Off, Tear Boundaries: Off. 3) Face Split: On, Tear Boundaries: Off. 4) Face Split: On/Off, Tear Boundaries: On.

Dissolve Edges

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete ‣ Dissolve Edges

Removes edges sharing two faces (joining those faces).

The options are the same as for the Dissolve Vertices tool.

Dissolve Faces

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete ‣ Dissolve Faces

Merges regions of faces that share edges into a single face.

Note

This can be accessed quickly using the F key, see: Dissolve Existing Faces.

Dissolve (Context-Sensitive)

Reference

Hotkey:Ctrl-X

This is a convenient shortcut that dissolves based on the current selection mode (vertex, edge, face).

Limited Dissolve

This tool can simplify your mesh by dissolving vertices and edges separating flat regions.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_limited-dissolve-before.png

Original mesh.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_limited-dissolve-after.png

Result of Limited Dissolve.

Max Angle
Reduces detail on planar faces and linear edges with an adjustable angle threshold.
All Boundaries
Always dissolve vertices that have two edge users at boundaries.
Delimit
Prevent faces from joining when they don’t share certain properties (material for e.g.).

Edge Collapse

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete ‣ Edge Collapse
Hotkey:Alt-M, Collapse

Merges each edge into single vertices. This is useful for taking a ring of edges and collapsing it, removing the face loop it ran through.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_collapse-before.png

Selected edge ring.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_collapse-after.png

Edge ring collapsed.

Edge Loop

Reference

Mode:Edit Mode (Vertex or Edge select modes)
Menu:Mesh ‣ Delete ‣ Edge Loop
Hotkey:X or Delete, Edge Loop

Edge Loop allows you to delete a selected edge loop if it is between two other edge loops. This will create one face loop where two previously existed.

Note

The Edge Loop option is very different to the Edges option, even if you use it on edges that look like an edge loop. Deleting an edge loop merges the surrounding faces together to preserve the surface of the mesh. By deleting a chain of edges, the edges are removed, deleting the surrounding faces as well. This will leave holes in the mesh where the faces once were.

Example

The selected edge loop on the UV Sphere has been deleted and the faces have been merged with the surrounding edges. If the edges had been deleted by choosing Edges from the Delete menu there would be an empty band of deleted faces all the way around the sphere instead.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_edge-loop-before.png

Selected edge loop.

../../../../_images/modeling_meshes_editing_basics_deleting_edge-loop-after.png

Edge loop deleted.