![transparent material zbrush 4 transparent material zbrush 4](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/wwHCsJyKxKs/maxresdefault.jpg)
This command will turn off transparent mode.
![transparent material zbrush 4 transparent material zbrush 4](https://cdna.artstation.com/p/assets/images/images/006/255/612/large/vahid-ahmadi-blue-eyes-zbrush-breakdown-by-vahid-ahmadi.jpg)
If I'm turning on or off solo mode, I want to turn off transparent mode. First, let's make the macro to turn on and off solo mode. You can see there's four commands here, one to turn on activate, which is actually activating the transparent mode, and turning off transparent mode, turning on solo mode, and turning off solo mode. Now let's open this macro in the text editor. Let's go down to ZStartup, Macros, and Misc, and we'll just save this as Solo. Let's save this in our ZBrush installation folder, Program Files, Pixologic, our version number of ZBrush. Now when we save the macro, we'll have some commands to work with like raw material, for making more precise and controlled macros. I'm gonna turn on transparent and then turn it off. Let's go to Macro, New Macro, and always hit No here, unless you know what you're doing. In this video, I'll show you a macro that can simplify this workflow. It's like hitting two buttons, when you really just wanna do one thing. Oftentimes, I find myself wanting to switch from solo mode to transparent mode, which means turning off solo mode and then turning on transparent mode, and vice versa, turning off transparent mode, then turning on solo mode. If both of them are active at the same time, it doesn't actually give you any extra benefit. It's controlled with these two buttons here, Transparent and Solo. In ZBrush you can make an object transparent, and you can also make it so that all other objects are made invisible, so you can focus on just one of them at a time.