Wave Modifier

The Wave modifier adds a ripple-like motion to an object’s geometry.

This modifier is available for meshes, lattices, curves, surfaces and texts.

../../../_images/modeling_modifiers_deform_wave_example-circular.jpg

Circular wave front.

../../../_images/modeling_modifiers_deform_wave_example-linear.jpg

Linear wave front.

../../../_images/modeling_modifiers_deform_wave_example-normals.jpg

Motion enabled for X, Normals enabled for Y.

Options

../../../_images/modeling_modifiers_deform_wave_panel.png

The Wave modifier.

Motion

Axis X/Y
The wave effect deforms vertices/control points in the Z direction, originating from the given starting point and propagating along the object with circular wave fronts (if both X and Y are enabled), or with rectilinear wave fronts (if only one axis is enabled), then parallel to the axis corresponding to the X or Y button activated.
Cyclic
Repeats the waves cyclically, rather than a single pulse.
Normals

For meshes only. Displaces the mesh along the surface normals (instead of the object’s Z axis).

X/Y/Z
Restrict displacement along normals to the selected local axes.

Time

Settings to control the animation.

Offset
Time offset in frames. The frame at which the wave begins (if Speed is positive), or ends (if Speed is negative). Use a negative frame number to prime and pre-start the waves.
Life
Duration of animation in frames. When set to zero, loops the animation forever.
Damping
An additional number of frames in which the wave slowly damps from the Height value to zero after Life is reached. The dampening occurs for all the ripples and begins in the first frame after the Life is over. Ripples disappear over Damping frames.

Position

Position X/Y
Coordinates of the center of the waves, in the object’s local space.
Falloff
Controls how fast the waves fade out as they travel away from the coordinates above (or those of the Start Position Object).
Start Position Object
Use another object as the reference for the starting position of the wave. Note that you then can animate this object’s position, to change the wave’s origin across time.

Delimiter & Noise

You can finely control which vertices are affected by the wave, and to what extent, using a vertex group and/or a texture.

See common masking options for a complete reference.

Arguments

The arguments of the wave function.

Speed
The speed per frame, of the ripple.
Height
The height or amplitude of the ripple.
Width
Half of the width between the tops of two subsequent ripples (if Cyclic is enabled). This has an indirect effect on the ripple amplitude. If the pulses are too near to each other, the wave may not reach the zero Z position, so in this case Blender actually lowers the whole wave so that the minimum is zero and, consequently, the maximum is lower than the expected amplitude. See Technical Details and Hints below.
Narrowness
The actual width of each pulse: the higher the value the narrower the pulse. The actual width of the area in which the single pulse is apparent is given by 4 / Narrowness. That is, if Narrowness is 1 the pulse is 4 units wide, and if Narrowness is 4 the pulse is 1 unit wide.

Importante

All the values described above are in local object space, i.e. they must be multiplied with the corresponding Scale values of the object to get the real dimensions.

Technical Details and Hints

The relationship of the above values is described here:

../../../_images/modeling_modifiers_deform_wave_front-characteristics.png

Wave front characteristics.

To obtain a nice wave effect similar to sea waves and close to a sinusoidal wave, make the distance between following ripples and the ripple width equal. That is, the Narrowness value must be equal to 2 / Width. E.g. for Width to be 1, set Narrow to 2.