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    A small Glass Series

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    • HornOxxH Offline
      HornOxx
      last edited by

      Hi Everyone
      Sometimes a small geometry exercise develops a life of it´s own. I suppose you all know that?

      I wanted to model that simple geometry of a glass, which almost everyone has in his glass cabinet
      as I guess - below octagonal and round above. That alone took me at least ten attempts.
      After it was finally done, I somehow had to make an immediate test rendering of course! And because
      an empty glass is boring, I considered, with which I can fill in this empty glass, and so on ...

      Thus, my guessed small exercise developed up to a mammoth undertaking 😄
      But after the results seem, however reasonable, I decided to show them here.

      Especially on two of them I would like to point with a few "making of" infos.

      The "Latte Macchiato" version was the easiest thing. Because I was too lazy to model the
      milk foam, I put a 2D image into the glass. The rendering became fantastic "out of the box",
      at least for my desired view of course.

      The "M & M's" version was a bit more difficult. Again I was too lazy to put every single
      M & M into the glass. So I decided to use SketchyPhysics. The 252 pieces of chocolate brought
      my computer almost to a crash but after a few attempts and a lot of patience, it finally worked.
      For getting the pieces of chocolate into the glass properly, I had to remodel the inner shape of the
      glass with SkPhy solids. In there I let fall the M & Ms.

      if anyone is interested or may need it
      https://3dwarehouse.sketchup.com/model.html?id=ufe71e3be-f5d2-472b-aea0-beaebec0c100


      GlasSerie 01 1600.jpg


      001 making of 1600.jpg


      004 making of 1600.jpg

      never trust a skinny cook

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      • cottyC Offline
        cotty
        last edited by

        Very nice SketchyPhysics example and nice glass!

        my SketchUp gallery

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        • pbacotP Offline
          pbacot
          last edited by

          Great looking renders. And thanks for sharing the model.

          MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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