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    Folding Along a Curved Fold Line

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    • W Offline
      wmbartlett
      last edited by

      Hello, Sketchupers; wmbartlett here.

      I'm modeling in aluminum, and need to fold along a curved fold line.

      I've put a drawing to show what I mean.

      Thanks!...wmbartlett


      How to Fold Along a Curve.skp

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      • GaieusG Offline
        Gaieus
        last edited by

        Hi WMB,

        You cannot fold geometry along a curved line. You can, however, use the PushPull tool to extrude the shape into some thickness, rotate the necessary edges of those "flips" and delete excess geometry.

        Note that somewhat more steps were needed than ideal due to your model not being very precise here and there. Have a look at what I attached and try to reconstruct the steps.


        How to Fold Along a Curve.skp

        Gai...

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        • W Offline
          wmbartlett
          last edited by

          Thank you, that looks great!

          wmbartlett

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          • GaieusG Offline
            Gaieus
            last edited by

            But the point is: can you also reproduce it? This is about helping to learn, not with modeling!
            😉

            Gai...

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            • W Offline
              wmbartlett
              last edited by

              Yeah, I think I got it. Let me play with it a little...

              Thanks...wmbartlett

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              • TaffGochT Offline
                TaffGoch
                last edited by

                Ummm,...
                ...guys, unfortunately, it's not that simple.

                If you fold along a curved line, neither of the 'new' surfaces will be flat. Both will be curved, and won't be curved along a circular arc. To see what I mean, simply print out a full sheet of paper, having a circular arc drawn upon it. If you fold along this arc, the problem becomes apparent.

                While the new surfaces appear to be circular curves, from what I can tell, each more closely approximates a parabola, or a section cut from an ellipse. (Can't quite tell which.)

                A 3D model can easily approximate the appearance by using intersections, but it's not quite "real world" (although, it may be close enough for your purposes.)

                To "accurately" model the true surfaces, I sub-divided and rotated individual faces, using the original curve segments as axes of rotations. This took a while, using incremental approximations (over-and-over, again....) to 'sneak up' on the true surface shape. It's a pain in the butt, it's still not perfect, but it's pretty darn close. (Cyan/yellow group.)

                If you compare the two end results (stack one upon the other,) you'll see that they're not exactly the same. You should compare rectangle edge lengths with the new curved surface edges. Also compare the length of the original curve with the corresponding curves in the end results. See what you think.

                Taff


                Fold Along a Curve.jpg


                Fold Along a Curve.skp

                "Information is not knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

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                • TaffGochT Offline
                  TaffGoch
                  last edited by

                  I woke up at 3:30 in the morning, realizing the errors of my ways...

                  If the sheet (paper/aluminum) is folded along that curve, such that each segment of the arc is folded at 90-degrees, the resultant shape is going to be a section of a CONE, not a cylinder. So, even though my previous approximation is closer to the real world, it's still off -- by quite a bit.

                  Constructing a cone, with 45-degree sides, with the bottom folded-up (also at 45 degrees,) provides for a 90-degree total bend. That's easy!

                  What makes it more difficult is that intersections no longer define the retangular edges of the paper/aluminum (since the geometry isn't cylindrical, but conical.) Incrementally rotating radial segments of the original pattern produces the correct, final result. This one is spot-on accurate -- no approximations.

                  Interesting geometry exercise. (Maybe I'll sleep better tonight.)

                  Regards,
                  Taff


                  Fold_Along_Curve_2.jpg


                  Fold_Along_Curve_2.skp

                  "Information is not knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

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                  • GaieusG Offline
                    Gaieus
                    last edited by

                    These are great explanations and of course, you are right, Taff! First I didn't even thought about how it should be done in "real world" - just "bent" the whoile thing. It was perpendicular and I was satisfied.

                    Gai...

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                    • TaffGochT Offline
                      TaffGoch
                      last edited by

                      @gaieus said:

                      First I didn't even think about how it should be done in "real world" - just "bent" the whoile thing. It was perpendicular and I was satisfied.

                      Gaieus,

                      Your description may be all William really needed.

                      My geometric obsession, though, kept me awake. I didn't have an "EUREKA!" moment while relaxing in the tub, but in bed.

                      Taff

                      "Information is not knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

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                      • C Offline
                        Click Draw
                        last edited by

                        I guess I shouldn't have skipped out on so many math classes....
                        Hey Taff...how do you put your logo on the bottom right of the screen?
                        Jeff

                        Have I mentioned how much of a laugh I get out of some of the Signatures on here!

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                        • TaffGochT Offline
                          TaffGoch
                          last edited by

                          Click Draw,

                          'Window > Styles'
                          'Edit' tab
                          Fourth button; 'Watermark'

                          You can specify an image to use as the watermark, size it, place in foreground/background, position and set transparency.

                          Taff

                          "Information is not knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

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                          • soloS Offline
                            solo
                            last edited by

                            Just a quick idea, how about using 'extrude line vector by two points'?


                            http://img8.imageshack.us/img8/3623/testyba5.gif

                            http://www.solos-art.com

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

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                            • E Offline
                              Ecuadorian
                              last edited by

                              Let's continue with TaffGoch's "geometric obsession". 😉

                              So you're interested in curved folds...
                              My best advice is: Do it with real paper.
                              Here's my try on this subject, made back in 1997, during my Freshman year:
                              Explorar0018.jpg
                              And, sincerely, I found it too difficult to do in metal, so I just covered the paper with a golden film for photography purposes 😎 . Quite often, candy is served in paper with curved folds. Study that and try to do your own. I'd say that these kind of folds do not produce any shape that I can name.. The resulting shapes are not simply cylindrical or conical in nature... they're a combination of several surface types, but you can be sure that they're all developable surfaces.

                              In fact, there seems to be a whole science behind curved folds, and it was discussed in last year's Siggraph:
                              http://graphics.stanford.edu/~niloy/research/folding/folding_sig_08.html

                              I hope this link can give you some clues. At the end of the page there are some downloadable PDF papers if you feel like reading, and also a foldable car! 👍 I'll give that a try!

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

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                              • TaffGochT Offline
                                TaffGoch
                                last edited by

                                Yikes! Ecuadorian may have just introduced me to a new SketchUp obsession!

                                Just a quick search reveals many SketchUp challenges...
                                Flickr "curved folding"
                                (Dozens of examples)
                                2758831243_6f4d0c9581_o.jpg
                                Developing such SketchUp models, where the unfolded pattern lies on one plane, may cost me more sleep-loss.

                                Taff

                                "Information is not knowledge." -- Albert Einstein

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                                • E Offline
                                  elizabeth001au
                                  last edited by

                                  If anyone is still interested in this thread and curved folding, I found this free programme which will fold models. It will only recognise .obj files, but sketchup will export, then you can import it back into sketchup.
                                  Wouldnt it be great to have this sort of plugin for sketchup! 😄 If only I had Ruby script wizard skills!

                                  http://mitani.cs.tsukuba.ac.jp/ori_ref/ - PROGRAMME DOWNLOAD

                                  http://www.curvedfolding.com/video/ori-ref-demo-video - DEMO VIDEO

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