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    What's your beginners tip?

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    • T Offline
      tesmeko
      last edited by

      Erase all the centerlines that was been used for autocad before importing.

      Instead of using multiple curves, try to make points so you wouln't forget drawing the arc itself in sketchup as curves inn autocad almost seem to fail connecting in one of its ends.

      For fast modeling try to just use the exterior wall lines, use the windowizer for the doors and windows, its easier and faster when you're in a hurry.

      Enjoy every bit of it modeling.

      Tesmeko

      keep sketching

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      • E Offline
        Ecuadorian
        last edited by

        1. When the 'scroll wheel zoom' is not working as you wish... Press Z and zoom the good, old fashioned way.

        2. To zoom on the selection, Right click > Zoom extents.

        3. Until you get used to the 3-point perspective SketchUp uses, you might want to activate the colored crosshairs (Window > Preferences > Drawing > Display crosshairs).

        My 2 cents.

        -Miguel Lescano
        Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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        • T Offline
          Twistlok45
          last edited by

          As a complete newb myself, i would have to say use the instructor function to familiarize yourself with each tool and spend some time with each one.
          Think of a simple project to do and see how it turns out.
          Use this in conjunction with asking for advice and you will be pleasantly surprised.

          I would like to thank Gaieus for helping me out with a simple pvc fitting tut.
          With that, i was able to create more complicated fittings on my own, first try!

          Thank you Gaieus for the help!

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          • cmdC Offline
            cmd
            last edited by

            Work with all aspects of "Inference Locking" so it becomes second nature to you.
            http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFfmIgJqlIw&feature=channel_page

            CMD

            • CMD
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            • boofredlayB Offline
              boofredlay
              last edited by

              I don't know if this was mentioned yet but:
              Use the Tape Measure tool and the SU Axis lines to create Guides (Construction Lines).


              Tape.jpg

              http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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              • broomstickB Offline
                broomstick
                last edited by

                @edson said:

                the three pillars of modelling well (IMHO, of course):

                1. work ALWAYS on layer 0;
                2. GROUP whatever geometry you are creating (in case there should be more than one copy of it, make it a COMPONENT);
                3. place it on another LAYER whose name makes sense (essential for controlling the model's visualization).

                This is very true, but it can lead to a lot of problems, when you export your model to another program, to render it. It happened to me, exporting the model to 3D Studio, and I had to open every group and re-assign all the geometry.

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                • broomstickB Offline
                  broomstick
                  last edited by

                  @ecuadorian said:

                  1. Until you get used to the 3-point perspective SketchUp uses, you might want to activate the colored crosshairs (Window > Preferences > Drawing > Display crosshairs).

                  My 2 cents.

                  niiiiiiiiiiice!

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                  • broomstickB Offline
                    broomstick
                    last edited by

                    @greentoaster said:

                    I create a small box so I can quickly reorient the screen cursor onto either of the three default planes - put the cursor on one of the faces of the box, hold down shift to lock the orientation - this works but I'm sure there's a shortcut but I've never discovered what it is.

                    Happy Sketching,

                    Brad
                    😄

                    Maya style, if I understand what youre doing 😄
                    The shortcuts are there: ctrl+1, 2, 3 enable front, left, top etc (not in this order I am only making an exmple here)

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                    • jeff hammondJ Offline
                      jeff hammond
                      last edited by

                      @kenny said:

                      To deselect you can use ctrl-T as well as clicking in white space. I use this a lot to avoid zooming out to get white space to click in.

                      Kenny

                      doesn't work on macs.. what i like to do in these circumstances(zoomed in with no white space) is just select something that is visible to then shift/select it... that will deselect everything in the model + it's just plain intuitive for me to work like that..

                      dotdotdot

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                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                        jeff hammond
                        last edited by

                        i'm not sure where i learned it from but something that really helped me out/sped me up/ridded me of some frustrations was learning about the single/double/triple click selecting...

                        if someone knows a link, post it up.. otherwise, i'll look around for it a little later..

                        (i'll edit this post once it's been sorted out)

                        dotdotdot

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                        • C Offline
                          cliff
                          last edited by

                          My tip has probably already been mentioned in some form before this, but it's still the one major thing I tell people when showing them SU for the first time: Go through and set up all your own hot keys as soon as possible so you can (a) learn all of the tools and what they do, and (b) create a workflow and keyboard system that you can relate to. If the defaults wrk for ya, great, but at least go through every possible hot key and try it out!

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                          • G Offline
                            GreenToaster
                            last edited by

                            @unknownuser said:

                            Maya style, if I understand what youre doing 😄
                            The shortcuts are there: ctrl+1, 2, 3 enable front, left, top etc (not in this order I am only making an exmple here)

                            I tried CTRL+1, & so forth - this doesn't work on my machine (Windows version).

                            If you really want something you won't ever stop pursuing it.

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                            • B Offline
                              bulbucila
                              last edited by

                              My tips are 3 actualy:

                              • whenever you are making more instancing of a model make it a component
                              • if you want to modify just one of them make it unique (right click "Make unique")
                              • if you want to reuse one component you make into other projects, click on "window - Components " and click on the plus sign to open another tab with components, you then can drag the components in your project (home icon) onto the components folder (browse)
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                              • B Offline
                                bulbucila
                                last edited by

                                One more tip:

                                • make components or groups on the early stage of creation, that way it will be easyer to handle (excuse my bad english)
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                                • B Offline
                                  bulbucila
                                  last edited by

                                  One tip for large models:

                                  • if you work with a large model with a lot of geometry, in order to avoid slow motion orbiting, use "Hide rest of model" best is to asign a shortcut key, that way when you edit a component or group the rest of the model will not be shown and will work faster (again pardon my bad english)
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                                  • jwlyon1J Offline
                                    jwlyon1
                                    last edited by

                                    This tip is hard to explain.
                                    When rotating, click+drag along the desired rotation axis.

                                    This lets you select a funky rotation axis with ease, and more importantly, repeatability.

                                    Here's a quick vid, I'm having trouble embedding it. Sorry!
                                    http://www.screencast.com/t/H30ObYtL

                                    Macbook Pro/ iMac
                                    OSX 10.7.2 Sketchup 8
                                    rogue-z is here!

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                                    • GaieusG Offline
                                      Gaieus
                                      last edited by

                                      Definitely an important one. Unfortunately it hardly gets any "exposure" in the SU Guide; the only place it's marginally mentioned is the "Folding along an axis of rotation" header when it explains autofold here:
                                      http://download.sketchup.com/sketchuphelp/gsu6_win/Content/D-Modification_Tools/ModTool-Rotate.htm

                                      Gai...

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                                      • A Offline
                                        alarm
                                        last edited by

                                        I always put Components, Materials, Styles, Scenes and Shadow settings at right side! Easy to access

                                        Website at alamdesign.com
                                        Blog http://www.sketch-stuff.blogspot.com

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                                        • pilouP Offline
                                          pilou
                                          last edited by

                                          Take a look at the Duh thread 😉

                                          Frenchy Pilou
                                          Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                          My Little site :)

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                                          • M Offline
                                            mogogirl
                                            last edited by

                                            As I'm still a beginner, take this for what it is worth. The biggest help for me was the Aidan Chopra series of videos on YouTube. I now also have the companion guide.."SketchUp for Dummies". He is very plain spoken and easy to understand and has lots of great tips. Just perfect for a complete newbie to 3D graphics like me!

                                            Hope this helps!

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