I don’t understand how they can do that when one model is blocking the other.
In any event, try the Merge Models
module to turn them into a single model.
I don’t understand how they can do that when one model is blocking the other.
In any event, try the Merge Models
module to turn them into a single model.
I have the opacity reduced on one model, so we can see what lies underneath on the other model.
Horses have a congenital malformation in the lower cervical vertebrae where one transforms into the physical identity of the one before it, i.e., C6 assumes physical characteristics of C5; C7 assumes characteristics of C6. All this during embryogenesis. The end result is a spectrum of stages of the transformations (hometic) that we are finding via X-ray and dissection.
My goal is to use GMM to prove that the morphological characteristics (landmarks) are homologous. But the learning curve of GMM for me is steep and I discovered this illustration is great way to show my colleagues in the meantime.
Sorry for the long explanation, but I figured you would understand. I will try the Merge Models module as you suggested. I assume then I can save/export the merged model as a .ply or .stl?
That’s a visualization technique that works when you have two separate models, one opaque one translucent. When you merge them into one, you can’t do that anymore.
If you want to share it that way, your best option is to package the scene as a MRB file as I mentioned before, share it with your colleagues and ask them to open it with Slicer.