Viewport Display Panel

Reference

Mode

Object and Pose Mode

Panel

Bone ‣ Viewport Display

Display panel lets you customize the look of your bones taking the shape of another existing object.

Hide

Hides the selected bone.

Wireframe

When enabled, bone is displayed in wireframe mode regardless of the viewport display mode. Useful for non-obstructive custom bone chains.

Custom Shape

Blender allows you to give to each bone of an armature a specific shape (in Object Mode and Pose Mode), using another object as “template”. In order to be visible the Shapes checkbox has to be enabled (Armature ‣ Viewport Display panel).

Options

Custom Shape

Object that defines the custom shape of the selected bone.

Bone Size

Option not to use bones length, so that changes in Edit Mode don’t resize the custom shape.

Scale

Additional scaling factor to apply to the custom shape.

Custom Shape Transform

Bone that defines the display transform of the custom shape.

Workflow

To assign a custom shape to a bone, you have to:

  1. Switch to Pose Mode Ctrl-Tab.

  2. Select the relevant bone by clicking on it.

  3. Go to the Display panel Custom Shape field and select the 3D object previously created in the scene; in this example we are using a cube and a cone. You can optionally set the At field to another bone.

../../../../_images/animation_armatures_bones_properties_display_custom-shape-example.png

The armature with shape assigned to bone. Note the origin of the Cone object.

Note

  • These shapes will never be rendered, like any bone, they are only visible in 3D Views.

  • Even if any type of object seems to be accepted by the Object field (meshes, curves, even metas…), only meshes really work. All other types just make the bone invisible.

  • The origin of the shape object will be at the root of the bone (see the bone page for root/tip).

  • The object properties of the shape are ignored (i.e. if you make a parallelepiped out of a cube by modifying its dimensions in Object Mode, you will still have a cube-shaped bone…).

  • The “along bone” axis is the Y one, and the shape object is always scaled so that one unit stretches along the whole bone length.

  • If you need to remove the custom shape of the bone, just right-click in the Custom Shape field and select Reset to default value in the pop-up menu.

So to summarize all this, you should use meshes as shape objects, with their center at their lower -Y end, and an overall Y length of 1.0 unit.