Glossary¶
This page lists definitions for terms used in Blender and this manual.
- Action Safe
Area of the screen visible on most devices. Place content inside it to ensure it does not get cut off.
- Active
When many items are selected, the last selected item will be the active one. Used in situations where the interface only shows options for one item at a time.
See also selection states.
- Aliasing
Rendering artifacts in the form of jagged lines.
- Alpha Channel
Additional channel in an image for transparency.
- Straight Alpha
Method where RGBA channels are stored as (R, G, B, A) channels, with the RGB channels unaffected by the alpha channel. This is the alpha type used by paint programs such as Photoshop or Gimp, and used in common file formats like PNG, BMP or Targa. So, image textures or output for the web are usually straight alpha.
- Premultiplied Alpha
Method where RGBA channels are stored as (R × A, G × A, B × A, A), with the alpha multiplied into the RGB channel.
This is the natural output of render engines, with the RGB channels representing the amount of light that comes toward the viewer, and alpha representing how much of the light from the background is blocked. The OpenEXR file format uses this alpha type. So, intermediate files for rendering and compositing are often stored as premultiplied alpha.
- Conversion (Straight/Premultiplied) Alpha
Conversion between the two alpha types is not a simple operation and can involve data loss, as both alpha types can represent data that the other cannot, though it is often subtle.
Straight alpha can be considered to be an RGB color image with a separate alpha mask. In areas where this mask is fully transparent, there can still be colors in the RGB channels. On conversion to premultiplied alpha, this mask is applied and the colors in such areas become black and are lost.
Premultiplied alpha, on the other hand, can represent renders that are both emitting light and letting through light from the background. For example, a transparent fire render might be emitting light, but also letting through all light from objects behind it. On converting to straight alpha, this effect is lost.
- Channel Packed
A separate image map is stored for each color and alpha channel. Channel packing is commonly used by game engines to save memory and to optimize memory access.
- Ambient Light
The light that comes from the surrounding environment as a whole.
- Ambient Occlusion
A ratio of how much Ambient Light a surface point would be likely to receive. If a surface point is under a foot or table, it will end up much darker than the top of someone’s head or the tabletop.
- Animation
Simulation of motion.
- Anti-Aliasing
Is the technique of minimizing Aliasing, by e.g. rendering multiple samples per pixel.
- Armature
An Object consisting of Bones. Used to Rig characters, props, etc.
- Axis
A reference line which defines coordinates along one cardinal direction in n-dimensional space.
- Axis Angle
Rotation method where X, Y, and Z correspond to the axis definition, while W corresponds to the angle around that axis, in radians.
- Baking
The process of computing and storing the result of a potentially time-consuming calculation so as to avoid needing to calculate it again.
- Bevel
The operation to chamfer or bevel edges of an object.
- Bézier
A computer graphics technique for generating and representing curves.
- Bit Depth
The exponent value (with base two) for how many colors can be represented within a single color channel. A higher bit depth will allow more possible colors, reducing banding, and increasing precision. Yet a higher bit depth will increase memory usage exponentially.
- Blend Modes
- Color Blend Modes
Methods for blending two colors together.
See also Blend Modes on GIMP docs.
- Bone
The building block of an Armature. Made up of a Head, Tail and Roll Angle which define a set of local axes and a point of rotation at the Head.
- Boolean
A type of logic dealing with binary true/false states.
See also Boolean Modifier.
- Bounding Box
The box that encloses the shape of an object. The box is aligned with the local space of the object.
- Bump Mapping
Technique for simulating slight variations in surface height using a grayscale “heightmap” texture.
- BVH
- Bounding Volume Hierarchy
A hierarchical structure of geometric objects.
See also Bounding Volume Hierarchy on Wikipedia.
- Caustics
The optical phenomenon of light concentration focused by specular reflections or refracting objects. In example observable on light passing through a glass of water onto a table or the pattern at the bottom of a swimming pool.
In rendering this refers to diffuse reflected light paths after a glossy or refraction bounce.
See also Caustics on Wikipedia.
- Child
- Chroma
- Chrominance
In general, a resulting image color decomposition, where its (L or Y) luminance channel is separated. There are two different contexts whereas this term is used:
- Video Systems
Refers to the general color decomposition resulting in Y (Luminance) and C (Chrominance) channels, whereas the chrominance is represented by: U = ( Blue minus Luminance ) and V = ( Red minus Luminance ).
- Matte Compositing
Refers to a point in the color gamut surrounded by a mixture of a determined spectrum of its RGB neighboring colors. This point is called Chroma key and this key (a chosen color) is used to create an Alpha Mask. The total amount of gamut space for this chrominance point is defined by users in a circular or square-shaped format.
- Chromaticities
The coordinates of the Primaries on the CIE 1931 xy chromaticity diagram.
- Clamp
- Clamping
Limits a variable to a range. The values over or under the range are set to the constant values of the range’s minimum or maximum.
- Collection
A device for organizing objects. See also Collections.
- Color Gamut
A gamut traditionally refers to the volume of color a particular color model/space can cover. In many instances, it is often illustrated via a 2D model using CIE Yxy coordinates.
- Color Space
A coordinate system in which a vector represent a color value. By doing so, the color space defines three things:
The exact color of each of the Primaries
The White Point
A transfer function
- sRGB
A color space that uses the Rec .709 Primaries and white point but, with a slightly different transfer function.
- HSV
Three values often considered as more intuitive (human perception) than the RGB system.
- Hue
The Hue of the color.
- Saturation
Also known as colorfulness, saturation is the quantity of hue in the color (from desaturated – a shade of gray – to saturated – brighter colors).
- Value
The brightness of the color (dark to light).
- HSL
- Hue, Saturation
See HSV.
- Luminance
See Luminance.
- YUV
Luminance-Chrominance standard used in broadcasting analog PAL (European) video.
- YCbCr
Luminance-ChannelBlue-ChannelRed Component video for digital broadcast use, whose standards have been updated for HDTV and commonly referred to as the HDMI format for component video.
- Concave Face
Face in which one vertex is inside a triangle formed by other vertices of the face.
See also Convex and concave polygons on Wikipedia.
- Constraint
A way of controlling one Object with data from another.
- Convex Face
Face where, if lines were drawn from each vertex to every other vertex, all lines would remain in the face. Opposite of a Concave Face.
- Coplanar
Refers to any set of elements that are all aligned to the same 2D plane in 3D space.
- Crease
Property of an Edge. Used to define the sharpness of edges in Subdivision Surface meshes.
- Curve
A type of object defined in terms of a line interpolated between Control Vertices. Available types of curves include Bézier, NURBS and Poly.
- Cyclic
Often referring to an object being circular. This term is often associated with Curve.
- Data User
An existing Blender object, which is using its own data, or linked data (data owned and controlled by another Blender object).
- Diffuse Light
Even, directed light coming off a surface. For most things, diffuse light is the main lighting we see. Diffuse light comes from a specific direction or location and creates shading. Surfaces facing towards the light source will be brighter, while surfaces facing away from the light source will be darker.
- Directional Light
The light that has a specific direction, but no location. It seems to come from an infinitely far away source, like the sun. Surfaces facing the light are illuminated more than surfaces facing away, but their location does not matter. A directional light illuminates all objects in the scene, no matter where they are.
- Displacement Mapping
A method for distorting vertices based on an image or texture. Similar to Bump Mapping, but instead operates on the mesh’s actual geometry. This relies on the mesh having enough geometry to represent details in the image.
- Display Referenced
Refers to an image whose Luminance channel is limited to a certain range of values (usually 0-1). The reason it is called display referenced is because a display cannot display an infinite range of values. So, the term Scene Referenced must go through a transfer function to be converted from one to the other.
- DOF
- Depth of Field
The distance in front of and behind the subject which appears to be in focus. For any given lens setting, there is only one distance at which a subject is precisely in focus, but focus falls off gradually on either side of that distance, so there is a region in which the blurring is tolerable. This region is greater behind the point of focus than it is in front, as the angle of the light rays change more rapidly; they approach being parallel with increasing distance.
- Double Buffer
Technique for rendering and displaying content on the screen. Blender uses two buffers (images) to render the interface, the content of one buffer is displayed while rendering occurs on the other buffer. When rendering is complete, the buffers are switched.
- Edge
Straight segment (line) that connects two Vertices, and can be part of a Face.
- Edge Loop
Chain of Edges belonging to consecutive Quads. An edge loop ends at a pole or a boundary. Otherwise, it is cyclic.
- Edge Ring
Path of all Edges along a Face Loop that share two faces belonging to that loop.
- Elastic
Objects that are able to spontaneously return to their original shape after all outside forces are removed from the object.
- Elasticity
The amount a material is elastic versus inelastic.
- Empty
- Euler
- Euler Rotation
Rotation method where rotations are applied to each of the X, Y, Z axes in a specific order.
Euler orders in Blender are most intuitive when read backwards: XYZ Euler is similar to rotating around Local Z using the Rotate tool in the 3D Viewport, followed by Local Y and then Local X.
- F-Curve
A curve that holds the animation values of a specific property.
- Face
Mesh element that defines a piece of surface. It consists of three or more Edges.
- Face Loop
Chain of consecutive Quads. A face loop stops at a Triangle or N-gon (which do not belong to the loop), or at a boundary. Otherwise, it is cyclic.
- Face Normal
The normalized vector perpendicular to the plane that a Face lies in. Each face has its own normal.
- Fake User
A special Data User, a program construct that is used to mark an object (e.g. material) to be saved in a blend-file, even when no Real User is using the object. Objects that are not used by any Data User are not included in saved blend-files.
- Field of View
The area in which objects are visible to the camera. Also see Focal Length.
- Fireflies
Rendering artifacts encountered with path tracing resulting from improbable samples that contribute very high values to pixels.
- FK
- Forward Kinematics
The process of determining the movement of interconnected segments or bones of a body or model in the order from the parent bones to the child bones. Using forward kinematics on a hierarchically structured object, you can move the upper arm then the lower arm and hand go along with the movement. Without forward kinematics the lower arm and hand would disconnect from upper arm and would move independently in space.
See also Inverse Kinematics.
- Focal Length
The distance required by a lens to focus collimated light. Defines the magnification power of a lens. Also see Field of View.
- Frame Types
In video compression, a frame can be compressed by several different algorithms. These algorithms are known as picture types or frame types and there are three major types: I, P, and B frames.
- I‑frames
The least compressible but don’t require other video frames to decode.
- P‑frames
Use data from previous frames to decompress and are more compressible than I‑frames.
- B‑frames
Use both previous and forward frames for data reference to get the highest amount of compression.
- Gamma
An operation used to adjust the brightness of an image.
See also Gamma correction on Wikipedia.
- Geometric Center
The mean average of the positions of all vertices making up the object.
- Gimbal
A pivoted support that allows the rotation of an object about a single axis.
See also Gimbal on Wikipedia.
- Gimbal Lock
The limitation where axes of rotation can become aligned, losing the ability to rotate on an axis (typically associated with Euler Rotation).
See also Gimbal lock on Wikipedia.
See also Gimbal lock on Stack Exchange.
- Global Illumination
A superset of Radiosity and ray tracing. The goal is to compute all possible light interactions in a given scene, and thus, obtain a truly photorealistic image. All combinations of diffuse and specular reflections and transmissions must be accounted for. Effects such as color bleeding and caustics must be included in a global illumination simulation.
- Global Space
See World Space.
- Glossy Map
See Roughness Map.
- HDRI
- High Dynamic Range Image
A set of techniques that allow a far greater dynamic range of exposures than normal digital imaging techniques. The intention is to accurately represent the wide range of intensity levels found in real scenes, ranging from direct sunlight to the deepest shadows.
See also HDRI on Wikipedia.
- Head
A subcomponent of a Bone. The point of rotation for the bone has X, Y, and Z coordinates measured in the Local Space of the Armature object. Used in conjunction with the Tail to define the local Y axis of the bone in Pose Mode. The larger of the two ends when displayed as an Octahedron.
- IK
- Inverse Kinematics
The process of determining the movement of interconnected segments or bones of a body or model in the order from the child bones to the parent bones. Using inverse kinematics on a hierarchically structured object, you can move the hand then the upper and lower arm will automatically follow that movement. Without inverse kinematics the hand would come off the model and would move independently in space.
See also Forward Kinematics.
- Interpolation
The process of calculating new data between points of known value, like Keyframes.
- IOR
- Index of Refraction
A property of transparent materials. When a light ray travels through the same volume it follows a straight path. However, if it passes from one transparent volume to another, it bends. The angle by which the ray is bent can be determined by the IOR of the materials of both volumes.
- Keyframe
A frame in an animated sequence drawn or otherwise constructed directly by the animator. In classical animation, when all frames were drawn by animators, the senior artist would draw these frames, leaving the “in between” frames to an apprentice. Now, the animator creates only the first and last frames of a simple sequence (keyframes); the computer fills in the gap.
- Keyframing
Inserting Keyframes to build an animated sequence.
- Lattice
A type of object consisting of a non-renderable three-dimensional grid of vertices.
See also Lattice Modifier.
- Light Bounces
Refers to the reflection or transmission of a light ray upon interaction with a material. See also Light Paths.
- Local Space
A 3D coordinate system that originates (for Objects) at the Object Origin. or (for Bones) at the Head of the Bone.
Compare to World Space.
- Luminance
The intensity of light either in an image/model channel, or emitted from a surface per square unit in a given direction.
- Manifold
Manifold meshes, also called water-tight meshes, define a closed non-self-intersecting volume (see also Non-manifold). A manifold mesh is a mesh in which the structure of the connected faces in a closed volume will always point the normals (and there surfaces) to the outside or to the inside of the mesh without any overlaps. If you recalculate those normals, they will always point at a predictable direction (To the outside or to the inside of the volume). When working with non-closed volumes, a manifold mesh is a mesh in which the normals will always define two different and non-consecutive surfaces. A manifold mesh will always define an even number of non-overlapped surfaces.
- MatCap
Stands for “material capture”, using an image to represent a complete material including lighting and reflections.
- Matte
- Mask
A grayscale image used to include or exclude parts of an image. A matte is applied as an Alpha Channel, or it is used as a mix factor when applying Color Blend Modes.
- Mesh
- Micropolygons
A polygon roughly the size of a pixel or smaller.
- MIP
- Mip-map
- Mip-mapping
‘MIP’ is an acronym of the Latin phrase ‘multum in parvo’, meaning ‘much in little’. Mip-maps are progressively lower resolution representations of an image, generally reduced by half squared interpolations using Anti-Aliasing. Mip-mapping is the process used to calculate lower resolutions of the same image, reducing memory usage to help speed visualization, but increasing memory usage for calculations and allocation. Mip-mapping is also a process used to create small anti-aliased samples of an image used for texturing. The mip-mapping calculations are made by CPUs, but modern graphic processors can be selected for this task and are way faster.
See the mip-map option present in the System Preferences.
- MIS
- Multiple Importance Sampling
A process of estimating the direction of light rays to improve sampling quality.
See Multiple Importance Sampling and also Importance sampling on Wikipedia.
- Modifiers
A non-destructive operation that is applied on top of some sort of data.
- Motion Blur
The phenomenon that occurs when we perceive a rapidly moving object. The object appears to be blurred because of our persistence of vision. Simulating motion blur makes computer animation appear more realistic.
- Multisampling
Rendering multiple samples per pixel, for Anti-Aliasing.
- N-gon
- NDOF
- 3D Mouse
A general term used to describe a 3D mouse, or any input devices which supports more degrees of freedom than a conventional 2D input device, see: NDOF (3D Mouse).
- Non-manifold
Non-Manifold meshes essentially define geometry which cannot exist in the real world. This kind of geometry is not suitable for several types of operations, especially those where knowing the volume (inside/outside) of the object is important (refraction, fluids, Boolean operations, or 3D printing, to name a few). A non-manifold mesh is a mesh in which the structure of a non-overlapped surface (based on its connected faces) will not determine the inside or the outside of a volume based on its normals, defining a single surface for both sides, but ended with flipped normals. When working with non-closed volumes, a non-manifold mesh will always determine at least one discontinuity in the normal directions, either by an inversion of a connected loop, or by an odd number of surfaces. A non-manifold mesh will always define an odd number of surfaces.
There are several types of non-manifold geometry:
Some borders and holes (edges with only a single connected face), as faces have no thickness.
Edges and vertices not belonging to any face (wire).
Edges connected to three or more faces (interior faces).
Vertices belonging to faces that are not adjoining (e.g. two cones sharing the vertex at the apex).
See also: Select Non-Manifold tool.
- Nonlinear Animation
Animation technique that allows the animator to edit motions as a whole, not just the individual keys. Nonlinear animation allows you to combine, mix, and blend different motions to create entirely new animations.
- Normal
The normalized vector perpendicular to a surface.
Normals can be assigned to vertices, faces and modulated across a surface using Normal Mapping.
See also Normals on Wikipedia.
- Normal Mapping
Is similar to Bump Mapping, but instead of the image being a grayscale heightmap, the colors define in which direction the normal should be shifted, the three color channels being mapped to the three directions X, Y and Z. This allows more detail and control over the effect.
- NURBS
- Non-uniform Rational Basis Spline
A computer graphics technique for generating and representing curves and surfaces.
- Object
Container for a type (mesh, curve, surface, metaball, text, armature, lattice, empty, camera, light) and basic 3D transform data (Object Origin).
- Object Center
- Object Origin
A reference point used to position, rotate, and scale an Object and to define its Local Space coordinates.
- Octahedron
An eight-sided figure commonly used to depict the Bones of an Armature.
- OpenGL
The graphics system used by Blender (and many other graphics applications) for rendering 3D graphics, often taking advantage of hardware acceleration.
See also OpenGL on Wikipedia.
- Overscan
The term used to describe the situation. when not all of a televised image is present on a viewing screen.
See also Overscan on Wikipedia.
- Parent
- Parenting
- Particle System
Technique that simulates certain kinds of fuzzy phenomena, which are otherwise very hard to reproduce with conventional rendering techniques. Common examples include fire, explosions, smoke, sparks, falling leaves, clouds, fog, snow, dust, meteor tails, stars, and galaxies, or abstract visual effects like glowing trails, magic spells. Also used for things like fur, grass or hair.
- Phong
Local illumination model that can produce a certain degree of realism in three-dimensional objects by combining three elements: diffuse, specular and ambient for each considered point on a surface. It has several assumptions – all lights are points, only surface geometry is considered, only local modeling of diffuse and specular, specular color is the same as light color, ambient is a global constant.
- Pivot Point
The pivot point is the point in space around which all rotation, scaling and mirror transformations are centered.
See also the Pivot Point docs.
- Pixel
The smallest unit of information in a 2D raster image, representing a single color made up of red, green, and blue channels. If the image has an Alpha Channel, the pixel will contain a corresponding fourth channel.
- Point Cloud
A list of points in 3D space.
- Pole
Vertex where three, five, or more edges meet. A vertex connected to one, two, or four edges is not a pole.
- Pose Mode
Used for Posing, Keyframing, Weight Painting, Constraining and Parenting the Bones of an Armature.
- Posing
Moving, Rotating and Scaling the Bones of an Armature to achieve an aesthetically pleasing pose for a character.
- Premultiplied Alpha
See Alpha Channel.
- Primaries
In color theory, primaries (often known as primary colors) are the abstract lights, using an absolute model, that make up a Color Space.
- Primitive
A basic object that can be used as a basis for modeling more complicated objects.
- Procedural Texture
Computer generated (generic) textures that can be configured via different parameters.
- Projection
In computer graphics, there are two common camera projections used.
- Perspective
A perspective view is geometrically constructed by taking a scene in 3D and placing an observer at point O. The 2D perspective scene is built by placing a plane (e.g. a sheet of paper) where the 2D scene is to be rendered in front of point O, perpendicular to the viewing direction. For each point P in the 3D scene a PO line is drawn, passing by O and P. The intersection point S between this PO line and the plane is the perspective projection of that point. By projecting all points P of the scene you get a perspective view.
- Orthographic
In an orthographic projection, you have a viewing direction but not a viewing point O. The line is then drawn through point P so that it is parallel to the viewing direction. The intersection S between the line and the plane is the orthographic projection of the point P. By projecting all points P of the scene you get the orthographic view.
- Proxy
For video editing, a proxy is a smaller version of the original file, typically using an optimized video codec and lower resolution version (faster to load) that stands in for the main image or video.
When proxies are built, editing functions like scrubbing and scrolling and compositing is much faster but gives lower resolution and slightly imprecise result.
- Quad
- Quadrilateral
- Quadrangle
- Quaternion
- Quaternion Rotation
Rotation method where rotations are defined by four values (X, Y, Z, and W). X, Y, and Z also define an Axis, and W an angle, but it is quite different from Axis Angle.
Quaternion values can be interpreted geometrically as defining a point on a unit sphere in 4D space. Moving along any great circle of the sphere represents rotating around a fixed axis, with one full circle matching two full rotations.
- Radiosity
A global lighting method that calculates patterns of light and shadow for rendering graphics images from three-dimensional models. One of the many different tools which can simulate diffuse lighting in Blender.
See also Radiosity (computer graphics) on Wikipedia.
- Random Seed
- Seed
Blender uses pseudo random number generators, which produce numbers that appear to be random, but given the same initial condition, they will always produce the exact same sequence of numbers.
This is a critical feature to get reproducible and/or stable effects (otherwise e.g. your hair simulation would change every time you re-run it, without any way to control the outcome).
The seed is a number that represents the initial condition of a random generator, if you change its seed, it will produce a new sequence of pseudo-random numbers.
See also Random seed on Wikipedia.
- Ray Tracing
Rendering technique that works by tracing the path taken by a ray of light through the scene, and calculating reflection, refraction, or absorption of the ray whenever it intersects an object in the world. More accurate than Scanline, but much slower.
- Real User
A Blender object, which is a Data User. Opposite of Fake User, which is only a program construct.
- Refraction
The change in direction of a wave due to a change in velocity. It happens when waves travel from a medium with a given Index of Refraction to a medium with another. At the boundary between the media, the wave changes direction; its wavelength increases or decreases but frequency remains constant.
- Render
The process of computationally generating a 2D image from 3D geometry.
- RGB
A color model based on the traditional primary colors, Red/Green/Blue. RGB colors are also directly broadcasted to most computer monitors.
- Rig
A system of relationships that determine how something moves. The act of building of such a system.
- Roll
- Roll Angle
The orientation of the local X and Z axes of a Bone. Has no effect on the local Y axis as local Y is determined by the location of the Head and Tail.
- Rolling Shutter
In real CMOS cameras the sensor is read out with scanlines and hence different scanlines are sampled at a different moment in time. This, for example, make vertical straight lines being curved when doing a horizontal camera pan. See also Rolling Shutter on Wikipedia.
- Roughness Map
A grayscale texture that defines how rough or smooth the surface of a material is. This may also be known as a Glossy Map.
- Scanline
Rendering technique. Much faster than Ray Tracing, but allows fewer effects, such as reflections, refractions, motion blur and focal blur.
- Scene Referenced
An image whose Luminance channel is not limited.
See also Display Referenced.
- Shading
Process of altering the color of an object/surface in the 3D scene, based on its angle to lights and its distance from lights to create a photorealistic effect.
- Smoothing
Defines how Faces are shaded. Faces can be either solid (faces are rendered flat) or smooth (faces are smoothed by interpolating the normal on every point of the face).
- Specular Light
A light which is reflected precisely, like a mirror. Also used to refer to highlights on reflective objects.
- SSS
- Subsurface Scattering
Mechanism of light transport in which light penetrates the surface of a translucent object, is scattered by interacting with the material, and exits the surface at a different point. All non-metallic materials are translucent to some degree. In particular, materials such as marble, skin, and milk are extremely difficult to simulate realistically without taking subsurface scattering into account.
- Straight Alpha
See Alpha Channel.
- Subdiv
- Subdivision Surface
A method of creating smooth higher poly surfaces which can take a low polygon mesh as input.
See also Catmull-Clark subdivision surface on Wikipedia.
- Subdividing
Technique for adding more geometry to a mesh. It creates new vertices on subdivided edges, new edges between subdivisions and new faces based on new edges. If new edges cross a new vertex is created at their crossing point.
- Swing
- Swing and Twist
Refers to decomposition of an arbitrary rotation into a sequence of two single axis rotations: a swing rotation that aims a chosen axis in its final direction using the shortest possible rotation path, followed by a twist rotation around that axis.
This decomposition is available through Driver Variables and inputs of the Transformation constraint. The Damped Track constraint produces a pure swing rotation.
In the Quaternion representation the swing rotation always has 0 as the X/Y/Z component corresponding to the selected axis, while twist always has 0 as the other two components.
- Tail
A subcomponent of a Bone. Has X, Y and Z coordinates measured in the Local Space of the armature object. Used in conjunction with the Head to define the local Y axis of a bone in Pose Mode. The smaller of the two ends when displayed as an Octahedron.
- Tessellation
The tiling of a plane using one or more geometric shapes usually resulting in Micropolygons.
- Texture
Specifies visual patterns on surfaces and simulates physical surface structure.
- Texture Space
The bounding box to use when using Generated mapping to add a Texture to an image.
- Timecode
A coded signal on videotape or film giving information about the frame number and time the frame was recorded. Timecodes are used to sync media between different recording devices, including both audio and video.
- Title Safe
Area of the screen visible on all devices. Place text and graphics inside this area to make sure they do not get cut off.
- Topology
The arrangement of Vertices, Edges, and Faces which define the shape of a mesh. See Vertex, Edge, and Face.
- Transform
The combination of location, rotation, and scale. Can be expressed in World Space or Local Space.
- Triangle
- UV Map
Defines a relation between the surface of a mesh and a 2D texture. In detail, each face of the mesh is mapped to a corresponding face on the texture. It is possible and often common practice to map several faces of the mesh to the same or overlapping areas of the texture.
- Vertex
- Vertices
A point in 3D space containing a location. It may also have a defined color. Vertices are the terminating points of Edges.
- Vertex Group
Collection of Vertices. Vertex groups are useful for limiting operations to specific areas of a mesh.
- Voxel
A cubic 3D equivalent to the square 2D pixel. The name is a combination of the terms “Volumetric” and “Pixel”. Used to store smoke and fire data from physics simulations.
- Walk Cycle
In animation, a walk cycle is a character that has just the walking function animated. Later on in the animation process, the character is placed in an environment and the rest of the functions are animated.
- Weight Painting
Assigning Vertices to a Vertex Group with a weight of 0.0 - 1.0.
- White Point
A reference value for white light defined by what happens when all the primaries, of the particular color model, are combined evenly.
A white point is defined by a set of CIE illuminates which correspond to a color temperature. For example, D65 corresponds to 6500 K light, D70 corresponding to 7000 K and so on.
- World Space
A 3D coordinate system that originates at a point at the origin of the world. Compare to Local Space.
- Z-buffer
Raster-based storage of the distance measurement between the camera and the surface points. Surface points which are in front of the camera have a positive Z value and points behind have negative values. The Z-depth map can be visualized as a grayscale image.