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    Creating a hat brim

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    • olisheaO Offline
      olishea
      last edited by

      You could do it if you had the patience of a saint.

      oli

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      • Rich O BrienR Offline
        Rich O Brien Moderator
        last edited by

        Ok.

        Without seeing hidden geometry it is hard to make suggestion.

        Not impossible though

        Download the free D'oh Book for SketchUp πŸ“–

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        • xiombargX Offline
          xiombarg
          last edited by

          Use Artisans knife tool to slice off the remaining brim and delete with as few slices as possible and as far out away from the head or top portion of the hat as the case may be. --Try to preserve the front view arc of the brim still attached to the hat-- Extrude out a new brim using Joint Push Pull. Use the knife tool again to add vertices or to trim and delete to get the proper shape. Use Vertex Tools to shape in detail as needed.

          Might want to hide most of the figure at some point when slicing with the knife.

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          • xiombargX Offline
            xiombarg
            last edited by

            Hope that made sense, I was typing on my phone and trying to give you the short version...

            This can be done but you have to rebuild the brim, and the easiest way to do this would be to get rid of the broken geometry and simplify the area of where the brim used to be into a small set of surfaces and hopefully still see where the brim used to be --hence using the knife tool.

            Once you have something that you can extrude out as a new brim, from there it's just a matter of pushing and pulling vertices around to get the shape back to a realistic looking brim.

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            • cottyC Offline
              cotty
              last edited by

              Can you share only the broken part (not only the hole πŸ˜„ ) to play with?

              my SketchUp gallery

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              • E Offline
                ericschimel
                last edited by

                I'll give it a try with the knife tool. If anyone wants to take a crack at it, here's the model:

                https://www.dropbox.com/s/g66rfmkzrlprlc0/Justin%20Reduced.skp

                -Eric
                http://plugin.sketchthis.net
                Sketchup Kitchen Design Plugin
                Custom Models

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                • ely862meE Offline
                  ely862me
                  last edited by

                  Really simple stuff.. Basically you will create the missing geometry then fit it together, then smooth the connection to make a nice transition.


                  Justin Reduced a.part1.rar


                  Justin Reduced a.part2.rar


                  Justin Reduced 1.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 2.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 3.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 4.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 5.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 6.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 7.jpg


                  Justin Reduced 8.jpg

                  Elisei (sketchupper)


                  Before no life was done on Earth it was THE LIFE ITSELF...GOD
                  Come and See EliseiDesign

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                  • E Offline
                    ericschimel
                    last edited by

                    Incredible! How did you do that? With Artisan tools, or did you just break that arc I made up into triangle somehow?

                    -Eric
                    http://plugin.sketchthis.net
                    Sketchup Kitchen Design Plugin
                    Custom Models

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                    • olisheaO Offline
                      olishea
                      last edited by

                      looks like some FFD involved too (free form deformation).

                      Great work elisei.

                      oli

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                      • ely862meE Offline
                        ely862me
                        last edited by

                        Hey there and thanks !

                        Well, I just drew an arc and then I copied it to the other side, then connected the two arcs with Curviloft. After that I used FFD to bring the new surface closer to the old one. Then I connected the parts using the pencil tool. Then I used the Smooth brush(from Artisan) and also I subdivided the connection in order to have better control over it with the Smooth brush . And that should be it.

                        Elisei (sketchupper)


                        Before no life was done on Earth it was THE LIFE ITSELF...GOD
                        Come and See EliseiDesign

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                        • E Offline
                          ericschimel
                          last edited by

                          That is quite impressive! Thanks again, I've learned something new!

                          -Eric
                          http://plugin.sketchthis.net
                          Sketchup Kitchen Design Plugin
                          Custom Models

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