Introduction

When set to hair type, particle system creates only static particles, which may be used for hair, fur, grass and the like.

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Particle hair systems example. Used for the grass and fur.

Growing

The first step is to create the hair, specifying the amount of hair strands and their lengths.

The complete path of the particles is calculated in advance. So everything a particle does a hair may do also. A hair is as long as the particle path would be for a particle with a lifetime of 100 frames. Instead of rendering every frame of the particle animation point by point there are calculated control points with an interpolation, the segments.

Styling

The next step is to style the hair. You can change the look of base hairs by changing the Physics Settings.

A more advanced way of changing the hair appearance is to use Children. This adds child hairs to the original ones, and has settings for giving them different types of shapes.

You can also interactively style hairs in Particle Edit Mode. In this mode, the particle settings become disabled, and you can comb, trim, lengthen, etc. the hair curves.

Animating

Hair can now be made dynamic using the cloth solver. This is covered in the Hair Dynamics page.

Rendering

Blender can render hairs in several different ways. Materials have a Strand section, which is covered in the materials section in the Strands Page.

Hair can also be used as a basis for the Particle Instance Modifier, which allows you to have a mesh be deformed along the curves, which is useful for thicker strands, or things like grass, or feathers, which may have a more specific look.