![]() Though if you work at say 4 times larger than needed and reduce the final to 25% of that, it will get rid of most of them. What you tend to see trying to keep the hex shape when using median is a few 1 pixel or half pixel shading points in between. The AA looks solid, but zoom in and you'll see how random the grey fill dots are. Only problem is the lines drawn, even with AA have flaws and are never really the same two passes in a row. Draw black, the wipe it with white then median to fill the gaps. The same thing can more or less be done with hex grid. ![]() It can be more but you start to get overlap then.Įxample of what that can wind up looking like: Then use median on 1, percentile 0 to fill in the gaps of the squares more or less. Then use white (or whatever color you want your background as long as it doesn't match anything in the grid more or less) to erase the grid to wipe it clear. You can basically draw a 2 pixel width grid with standard squares in black. Maybe someone else has a better idea but here's what I was thinking: ![]() There may be some other way, but I dont know of it. So my first question is, how do you feel about little white dots or possibly switching to a standard grid? Probably not, so I beat myself up a little trying to figure out if median will work. those off angles never work out right to merge the gaps using something like Median. Hex grid is most frustrating to do something like this with.
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