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    Treeline

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved SketchUp Components, Materials & Styles
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    • Alan FraserA Offline
      Alan Fraser
      last edited by Alan Fraser

      Here's a seamless parkland treeline. The trees are silhouetted in the png image, so any sky will show through, but I haven't bothered to bloat geometry by physically cutting them out to throw a ragged shadow, because in almost every case they would be too far away to notice.
      You can line these end to end to create any length you like.


      park_treeline.jpg


      park_treeline.skp

      3D Figures
      Were you required to walk 500 miles? Were you advised to walk 500 more?
      You could be entitled to compensation. Call the Pro Claimers now!

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      • urgenU Offline
        urgen
        last edited by

        Good idea and excellent execution! ๐Ÿ‘ ... Thanks,Alan! ๐Ÿ˜„

        --pupil forever...------

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        • F Offline
          fbartels
          last edited by

          Alan, Thanks! Already using it in my current model. BTW, there is a little artifact lineish thing just along the top edge of the image.

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          • T Offline
            tomsdesk
            last edited by

            Nice, Alan...thank you.

            http://www.tomsdesk.moonfruit.com/
            2.5D Trees & Shrubs!

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            • boofredlayB Offline
              boofredlay
              last edited by

              Thanks Alan ๐Ÿ˜„

              http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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              • Alan FraserA Offline
                Alan Fraser
                last edited by

                It's been noticed by a few people that sometimes a slight hint of the edge of a transparent png is apparent when it has no business being there. In this case, however, it does seem that Photoshop was the culprit...it didn't erase right to the very edge. There was a slight, 1 pixel hint of semi-transparent sky still present. I cropped it off and re-uploaded.
                You'll find it best to temporarily turn on Hidden geometry when lining these up. It's the only way you are guaranteed to be able to butt them together accurately.

                3D Figures
                Were you required to walk 500 miles? Were you advised to walk 500 more?
                You could be entitled to compensation. Call the Pro Claimers now!

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                • B Offline
                  bertb
                  last edited by

                  Thanks Alan, nice and usefull.

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                  • D Offline
                    dylan
                    last edited by

                    Cheers Alan, a nice addition!

                    http://dmdarchitecture.co.uk/

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                    • B Offline
                      betzie
                      last edited by

                      thanks alan, very usefull

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                      • W Offline
                        watkins
                        last edited by

                        Dear Alan,

                        A ruby that generates a circle with a given side length might be useful.

                        Select the circle's centre, and then activate circle_side_fixed script

                        Enter:

                        Number of sides = n (24 by default)
                        Side length = L (e.g. equal to the tree line component length)

                        The Ruby then calculates the correct radius (L/2sin(360/n) = 130,345.09430 mm for your tree line) and draws circle. The script could be generalised to include polygons of fixed side length. Saves the hassle of calculating the radius.

                        Regards,
                        Bob

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                        • AnssiA Offline
                          Anssi
                          last edited by

                          @watkins said:

                          Dear Alan,

                          A ruby that generates a circle with a given side length might be useful.

                          Select the circle's centre, and then activate circle_side_fixed script

                          Enter:

                          Number of sides = n (24 by default)
                          Side length = L (e.g. equal to the tree line component length)

                          The Ruby then calculates the correct radius (L/2sin(360/n) = 130,345.09430 mm for your tree line) and draws circle. The script could be generalised to include polygons of fixed side length. Saves the hassle of calculating the radius.

                          Regards,
                          Bob

                          Bob,

                          You don't need a Ruby for this:

                          Draw a circle with the wanted number of segments but any radius and group it (if it is not the only object in your model)
                          Edit the group. Select the Tape Measure tool and measure one segment of the circle.
                          Type the segment length you want(the value appears in the VCB), and press Enter. SU asks if you want to resize the group/component. Click OK. Done.

                          Note that in SU, the circumference of a "circle" is smaller than that of a real circle with the same radius, as the circle in SU is a polygon.

                          Anssi

                          securi adversus homines, securi adversus deos rem difficillimam adsecuti sunt, ut illis ne voto quidem opus esset

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                          • W Offline
                            watkins
                            last edited by

                            Dear Anssi,

                            Many thanks for that tip. I hadn't thought to do that.

                            Regards,
                            Bob

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                            • N Offline
                              nrevk niatpak
                              last edited by

                              thanks. it'll come in handy ... ๐Ÿ‘

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