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    SU or ...? for hard surface modeling

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    • K Offline
      kwistenbiebel
      last edited by

      that water splash looks more advanced than mine.
      Is the splash itself also done using Skeytchup? (an extrude of a bezier curve, triangulating and subdividing it with the Subdivide'nd Smooth plugin?)

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      • FrederikF Offline
        Frederik
        last edited by

        ๐Ÿ˜ฒ ๐Ÿ˜ฎ
        Like Kwistenbiebel, I would also like to learn more about how you've done the water splash, Pete..!!
        PLEASE...!! ๐Ÿ˜‰

        Cheers
        Kim Frederik

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        • R Offline
          RustyShack
          last edited by

          @solo said:

          Are you needing this for a product display or is it for a bathroom design? If indeed it is for a product then I understand your need to total accuracy, and would suggest using the blue prints to get the dimensions right and maybe even using Rhino for the modeling. It looks very much like the Kohler Botticelli brand BTW.

          Thanks for the great renders--you spent much more time/effort than you should have. The sink is for a bathroom design and I agree that total accuracy is not needed for this project. The real motivation for my post, which I should have made clearer, was to find out if there was an equivalent to SketchUp for this kind of modeling--in other words, an easy to use and learn program that handles beveling, filleting and merging complex curves as easily as SketchUp handles rectilinear forms (and many curved ones). The more I look, however, the more it seems that SketchUp is truly unique in its combination of usability and capability. SketchUp will remain my modeling workhouse, but I'm trying to see what (if anything) I should add to my workflow to make life easier when encountering "difficult" objects that SU doesn't natively handle well. I see Rhino has demo and is working on a Mac OS version, so perhaps I'll spend some time on it.

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          • S Offline
            sepo
            last edited by

            That water looks very good Pete. ๐Ÿ‘

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            • sketch3d.deS Offline
              sketch3d.de
              last edited by

              @rustyshack said:

              ...in other words, an easy to use and learn program that handles beveling, filleting and merging complex curves as easily as SketchUp handles rectilinear forms (and many curved ones)....

              check ViaCAD Pro f. Win/OSX, a feature-based NURBS surface and volume modeler w/ intuitive user interface, history tree as well as all common vector-based CAD filters incl. a SU import:

              Link Preview Image
              2D / 3D CAD and Drafting Software | CAD Software for Mac and Windows | CAD Programs | Drawing Software | Architecture Design Software

              2D / 3D CAD and Drafting Software, CAD Software for Mac and Windows, CAD Programs, Drawing Software, Architecture Design Software

              favicon

              (www.punchcad.com)

              imho THE sleeper in this price range (MSRP 250 U$)

              have fun,
              Norbert

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              • Gus RG Offline
                Gus R
                last edited by

                Rusty,

                This actually can be done using subdivide and smooth. I experimented with some techniques I've already been trying and came up with a rather simple method using not the actual curves of the sink but the tangent lines of the curves. I used a circle for the plan layout with 24 segments. You can also use a polygon as long as the legs reflect the tangent lines of either a circle or elipse.

                robatto sink 2.jpg

                You also have to place control lines here and there as shown on the image and the attached skp file. These will go at the point of curvature for the arcs of the profile, etc.

                Here's the skp for you or anyone else to study.

                robatto sink.skp

                This is using a circle. However, you can do this with an oval or an ellipse. It can also be done using 1/2 of a basic polygon.

                I'm generating a KT rendering and should have one up any minute now.

                Gus

                www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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                • Gus RG Offline
                  Gus R
                  last edited by

                  Here's the KT render. You should be able to see the fillet at the junction of the bump out and the basin.

                  robatto sink 3.jpg

                  robatto sink 4.jpg

                  Gus

                  www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                  www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                  www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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                  • GaieusG Offline
                    Gaieus
                    last edited by

                    Nice one, Gus! ๐Ÿ‘

                    Gai...

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                    • Gus RG Offline
                      Gus R
                      last edited by

                      Thank you Gaieus. Guess my insomnia serves a purpose.

                      ๐Ÿ˜„

                      www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                      www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                      www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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                      • daleD Offline
                        dale
                        last edited by

                        Yes great work folks, I knew this would be a fun one to watch. ๐Ÿ‘

                        Just monkeying around....like Monsanto

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                        • R Offline
                          RustyShack
                          last edited by

                          @unknownuser said:

                          Gus ....you nailed it!! cheers to you!!

                          I agree--that looks spectacular and relatively easy to model. When I tried using subdivide and smooth initially, I could not figure out how to control the subdivision. I was trying to draw elaborate grids etc etc and nothing seemed to work. Never occurred to me that a few well-placed control lines like the ones in your model would do the job.

                          I will give this a go later today and see how it goes.

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                          • soloS Offline
                            solo
                            last edited by

                            Oh yeah, Gus got it pretty right! ๐Ÿ‘

                            Remember me saying it looks like a Kohler Botticelli?, well out of curiousity I went to the Kohler site and there it was, I attach a link below, scroll down and click on the 'for installers and designers' tab and a .dwg becomes available for download, it's the actual model which can be opened up in SU for you to use.

                            Enjoy.

                            http://www.us.kohler.com/onlinecatalog/detail.jsp?item=8038302&section=2&category=16

                            OMG!!! see the price ๐Ÿ˜ฒ

                            http://www.solos-art.com

                            If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                            • Gus RG Offline
                              Gus R
                              last edited by

                              Thanks guys. Pete, thanks for the link. I might try doing one to scale later since this one was eyeballed.

                              Modelhead, for another $500 you can also get one (1) towel bar. Throw in a tooth brush/cup holder for another $500 and you can have all three for $6,000!

                              ๐Ÿ˜†

                              www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                              www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                              www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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                              • StinkieS Offline
                                Stinkie
                                last edited by

                                "$3,286.00 and up" Fruitcakes. ๐Ÿ˜†

                                Gus, Pete: cool tuts. Thanks.

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                                • Gus RG Offline
                                  Gus R
                                  last edited by

                                  Stinkie, thanks.

                                  Pete, great work by the way as usual. So, how did you make the water?

                                  Gus

                                  www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                                  www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                                  www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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                                  • soloS Offline
                                    solo
                                    last edited by

                                    I hope I am not hijacking this thread, I believe the issue of the basin is solved so here is how I do splashes:

                                    I have made these before and posted someplace on this forum. Anyway I use SDS and FFD to create the shape (nothing fancy there) however SDS can increase the poly count to something unusable in SU so be careful.
                                    I normally make it in SU then export to Vue and texture it there and save it as an object for later use.

                                    Here is a snap of a very simple one I created today as an example, I deleted the .skp of the one used on the first page as I saved it as a .vob (Vue object) so there was no need to keep the SU one which was very high poly anyway.
                                    And if you want i attached the .skp too.


                                    http://img58.imageshack.us/img58/389/solosplashno3.jpg

                                    splash.skp

                                    http://www.solos-art.com

                                    If you see a toilet in your dreams do not use it.

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                                    • EarthMoverE Offline
                                      EarthMover
                                      last edited by

                                      Thanks Pete. This is helpful. I was working on creating a splashfoot for a waterfall right before I came across this thread. Funny how life works.

                                      3D Artist at Clearstory 3D Imaging
                                      Guide Tool at Winning With Sketchup
                                      Content Creator at Skapeup

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                                      • FrederikF Offline
                                        Frederik
                                        last edited by

                                        Yeah... Thanks a lot, Pete..!! ๐Ÿ‘
                                        Much appreciated..!! ๐Ÿ˜‰

                                        Cheers
                                        Kim Frederik

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                                        • Gus RG Offline
                                          Gus R
                                          last edited by

                                          Pete,

                                          Thanks, looks great.

                                          Ever do one using a milk material?

                                          Gus

                                          www.instagram.com/gusrobatto/

                                          www.facebook.com/gusrobatto

                                          www.flickr.com/photos/gusrobatto

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