And What have you done lately.

  • Thread starter Thread starter Der Alta
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Der Alta

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DerAlta
Enjoying a new program recently, and have managed to whip this up in about 6 hours time. That's from learning how to draw a line, to this.

It's a pet project of mine that I've been doing some fund raising for. A parrot rescue on Cape Cod. www.allcapeparrotrescue.com

view02.jpg


view03.jpg


I've got two fly-bys, but at 90 meg+ each, I'm not uploading them.

AO
 
Excellent work! The second picture makes the property appear much larger than the first. Really cool stuff.
 
It's a program called Sketch-up. A 3D modeling software package that I've only started using recently.

As I get more in tune with it, It'll only get better.

Suprisingly, the lot is about 2 acres. What I'm not is the high fence around it.

AO
 
Originally posted by hanker
Nice Work! Are you using that program for work? or just a new hobby of yours??
Both. Yes, I'm a glutton for punishment.

I use it a bit at work, but more at home as a hobby. It's amazing how much free time you have when you don't watch TV.

AO
 
Nice stuff, AO!

If you get a good color aerial photo, you can import it and place it on the ground under the buildings and scale it to fit. That can be kind of effective if the image is right, because you get the surrounding roads, walks, textures, etc.

Nice work!
 
I've done this:
 

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And this:
 

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I wish I could get to do stuff like this in CAD class.

I'm bored to death drawing floor plans and elevations of boring houses in AutoCAD.

DGB, the programs runs 475 bucks, but you can get a fully functional demo to use for 8 hours of design time.

http://www.sketchup.com/
 
Originally posted by DGB454
Very cool. I'm going to have to check it out. How much does the package run for? Does knowing how to use a cad help?
It's about $400, but sometimes the have specials of $99.

It's meant to be a 3-D sketch tool rather than an actual CAD tool. It's meant to allow users to quickly explore ideas in perspective, and to generate looser, more hand-drawn images than conventional rendering programs. It will do simple flythroughs and shadow studies, too.

It does work very like a CAD program, but it's more like building a model with elastic cardboard. Every line can be pushed and pulled in all dimensions, and any time you draw lines connecting at least 3 points, it automatically fills in the planar surface connecting them. The planes can then be extruded in one step to make a volume. Any time you draw a line to another line, it divides the lines or planes you touch into two. You can then stretch the pieces as you see fit. Then if you delete a line, the other pieces heal automatically.

You can also paint surfaces with colors or textures with a single mouse click. You can create and edit components, too, like windows or other objects. It will cut sections and do semi-transparent renderings, too.

There's a downloadable full version on their website that's fully functional for 8 hours. Then if you buy it, they send you an authorization code.
 
I was about to download the trial, but then that big list of information you have to submit loaded on the screen. I'd rather not then. :p
 
It takes like thirty-five seconds to input. And I don't even think you need to give any information. There is a download link at the top of the page.
 
Name and email address? Big deal. They'll send you a bimonthly email with news and tips. That's it.
 
Originally posted by Super-Supra
I was about to download the trial, but then that big list of information you have to submit loaded on the screen. I'd rather not then. :p
It's worth it .
 
There are a variety of 2-D people in it already, and one 3-D guy I never use. The 2-D people work fine and what I usually do is put 2 of them in the sam spot, but rotated 90 deg from each other like a cardboard standup. That way they have some mass from many angle.
 
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