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I'm struggling here crew! Why can't I get this fairly simple idea to work...

I need to create a mesh to fit over a model of a sealed cosmetics tube, and effectively emulate a printable area on a real world sealed cosmetics tube.

My process at the moment is;

  1. Import the mesh in from a separate CAD program (assume it is not created by me)
  2. Create a cylinder primitive around it
  3. Z align the cylinder, and use the upper and lower bounds of the real world print area to crop the top and bottom of the cylinder to represent this size.
  4. edit mode -> face select - > delete top and bottom face of cylinder
  5. Subdivide the cylinder a few times to help the next step...
  6. Apply modifier - shrinkwrap to the tube (wrap method = project, snap mode = on surface, negative = checked, and offset created appropriately to prevent z-fighting)
  7. Inspecting the UV and it all looks good - nice quads as expected from the cylinder primitive.
  8. However, the mesh itself is now distorted from conforming to the face of the tube during the shrinkwrap process. You can see in the image that partway up the mesh, the edges begin to taper in toward the centre. This distorts any artwork which is applied to the tube, giving it a tapering effect like the star-wars opening scroll. This is undesirable.

Is there a way that I can correct the shrinkwrapped mesh so that it does not distort the artwork texture when it is applied?

Here are some images;

enter image description here enter image description here

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    $\begingroup$ The topology seems bad, why don't you do it clean? As for the texture, maybe simply use Unwrap >Project from View? $\endgroup$
    – moonboots
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 6:45
  • $\begingroup$ ... agreed .. in real life, if the printed skin was going to stretch on application, then the artwork would have to be pre-stretched the other way, Are seams acceptable down the sides of the tube? $\endgroup$
    – Robin Betts
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 11:08
  • $\begingroup$ Hi @moonboots when you say "do it clean" can you elaborate on this? As for UV projection method...Project from view doesn't work for me as it mashes the front and back of the UV map ontop of each other...(ie if i'm projecting from -y, then it overlays -y and +y on the same region in the UV), when I need the UV to work like wrapped around band of printable area. Possible I am getting this wrong as well though tbh :P $\endgroup$
    – ScottF
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 22:47
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    $\begingroup$ @RobinBetts in real life tubes are printed when they are still a flat sheet of material, ie before any deformation of the material occurs. Printing proofs for artworks on tubes are typically a rectangular region which is the height of the printable space, and the circumference of the tube (with a little tolerance), and I want to be able to export a UV that adheres to this industry standard. I have a seam down the left side of the print region mesh (where the mesh intersects -x) and this is how it will be for all the meshes, as this is consistent with real world manufacturing $\endgroup$
    – ScottF
    Commented Sep 14, 2023 at 22:55
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    $\begingroup$ You can only select the front faces and U >Project from View, then select the rest of the mesh, unwrap and put over a yellow part of your image $\endgroup$
    – moonboots
    Commented Sep 15, 2023 at 4:56

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