( Chapter 9 offers an introduction to 3D printing with SketchUp.) If you’re going to be printing your own bike helmets and vacuum cleaners in the next decade, you’d better get good at modeling organic shapes. This chapter is devoted to helping you discover SketchUp’s “rounder” side.Īnother reason for pushing past basic boxes? Many people see 3D printing (sound of futuristic music and warp drives engaging) as the next vanguard of human innovation, and 3D modeling - like you do with SketchUp - is half of that equation. SketchUp provides fantastic tools for creating forms that aren’t the least bit boxy, but those tools aren’t as obvious as Push/Pull and Rectangle, so most people never find them. All you need is time, ingenuity, and the ability to step back and break down things into their basic parts. Even though SketchUp is really good at letting you make models of built structures, you can use SketchUp to build just about anything you can imagine. Here’s something you already know: There’s more to life than modeling buildings. Using the Solid Tools for additive and subtractive modeling SketchUp For Dummies (2017) Part 2 Modeling in SketchUp Chapter 6 Going Beyond BuildingsĮxtruding around circles and along paths with Follow MeĬreating 3D terrain with the Sandbox tools
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