I just realized they don't even have to be planar to work. I turned
'edit points' on and started to move them randomly in the z value and
the sub-surfaces seem to adapt perfectly to the profile curves.

On Dec 10, 6:55 pm, visose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You can't create multiple lofts. You could recreate this without
> scripting though, but its not very pretty.
> You can loft all of the curves and then use the isotrim component to
> get multiple subsets of this surface. The problem is that this
> component works in uv coordinates. This example looks like planar
> curves placed vertically every 'x' units. You have to get the 'u'
> values of the surface that correspond to the evenly spaced 'x' values
> in world coordinates. Here's an 
> example:http://grasshopper3d.googlegroups.com/web/apparentmultiplelofts.jpg
> This only works because the loft was created with planar curves placed
> on parallel planes.
>
> On Dec 10, 3:38 pm, gix3d <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Hi all. Is there an alternative way to make this without " VB script
> > "?
>
> > Thank you all!

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