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    Map a texture to a kerb

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    • B Offline
      bhbarchitects
      last edited by

      Cheers all for the info.

      Brodie thanks for the link, will get it bought and have a look.

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      • thomthomT Offline
        thomthom
        last edited by

        http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=39442

        Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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        • Rich O BrienR Online
          Rich O Brien Moderator
          last edited by

          That mesh isn't all quads to begin with.

          Use Fredo's ThruPaint and you'll see where it fails to paint. Those areas are where your gonna run into problems.

          Fix them and it'll map easily.

          Download the free D'oh Book for SketchUp πŸ“–

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          • panixiaP Offline
            panixia
            last edited by

            i would use a combination of split donuts/sausages, quadface tools and tru paint for this.. with theese tools.. it's quite easy.

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            • B Offline
              bhbarchitects
              last edited by

              Used thru paint and it worked great, love quad face tools my only problem is i think i need some lessons on quad faces and how to create, as most of my time i create in sandbox and it gets worse from that point onwards. 😞

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              • panixiaP Offline
                panixia
                last edited by

                modeling in quads takes other advantages, not only texture mapping, also you got a cleaner well subdivided mesh, handling the mesh is more effective, because you can quickly select/grow/shrink loops and rings it is also very fast to create/add/remove them and get more control over the mesh density.. if you give a look to the pages thomthom linked in the first post of quadface tools, you will find them very useful.. in particular the link to that blender forums..

                anyway did you try "convert sandbox quads to quadface quads"?

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                • thomthomT Offline
                  thomthom
                  last edited by

                  @thirty6 said:

                  how to create, as most of my time i create in sandbox and it gets worse from that point onwards. 😞

                  what and how does it get worse?

                  Thomas Thomassen β€” SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                  List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                  • genma saotomeG Offline
                    genma saotome
                    last edited by

                    If you don't have too much to do and are inclined to use basic techniques rather than plugins then paint one section of your curb, adjust the texture placement as needed, and then use alt-paint to sample the placed texture from one poly. Paint the rest of the row manually. All of the individual polys you paint will replicate the appearance of the poly you sampled. Repeat as needed if the kerb has several rows of polys, top to bottom.

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                    • GarethG Offline
                      Gareth
                      last edited by

                      I don't understand why this should be happening

                      If, for example, you simply drew your profile and then used the 'Follow Me' tool instead of the 'Profile Builder', does the same thing occur ?

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                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                        jeff hammond
                        last edited by

                        @genma saotome said:

                        If you don't have too much to do and are inclined to use basic techniques rather than plugins then paint one section of your curb, adjust the texture placement as needed, and then use alt-paint to sample the placed texture from one poly. Paint the rest of the row manually. All of the individual polys you paint will replicate the appearance of the poly you sampled. Repeat as needed if the kerb has several rows of polys, top to bottom.

                        fwiw, you can use ThruPaint to do that automatically as well.. it has quadmeshUV, naturalUV (which is what you're talking about), then projectedUV

                        that said, the technique you're describing will not properly texture many situations.. to properly map these quads, you'd have to make a gazillion individual textures and scale/rotate/skew each on etc.. ie- huge nightmare that i bet nobody has actually done manually before..

                        [quadmeshUV on the left -- naturalUV (ie- the technique you're describing) on the right]
                        o1.jpg

                        dotdotdot

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                        • B Offline
                          bhbarchitects
                          last edited by

                          Sorry for the delay been on holiday

                          Thanks everybody for the comments, Thom Thom; example build a terrain then the clients wants me to add some steps, then next day wants them taking out and a ramp adding. I end up with a mesh with patches added and over a period of alterations it gets messy and hard to use. I notice the expert users always display clean equally proportioned meshes so either i need some training in sandbox / quads or there must be a way of re forming a mesh once i have made the alterations.

                          I have enclosed a screen shot of an example, this site has been regularly altered over a 12 month period.


                          example of mesh

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                          • pbacotP Offline
                            pbacot
                            last edited by

                            Intense scene.

                            I hear you. I don't think working a terrain with hardscape will ever be like modeling a car. We have to work out modeling methods that have some logic with the content (including components and patterns that somehow interrelate to the terrain mesh) and a terrain that has existing and proposed grading, not to mention roadways and paths that follow grades, as precise as we can manage.

                            I find I must cut pieces of the terrain out, but often the edges must meet up with another piece. Other times the terrain can simply butt against a wall or other vertical form. For some jobs, I just let the forms intersect and who would be the wiser that the terrain is hidden by a building or new embankment in a rendering or site model CD view?

                            The technique is a work in process for just about everyone as far I can see. I haven't seen a concise approach yet. Maintaining "good" or "good enough" mesh is difficult for a site design project with all its phases(and "good" is relative, especially compared to expert organic modeling).

                            I think you will want to move beyond Sandbox and use some of the organic modeling tools, particularly Artisan, Vertex Tools, Toposhaper, Instant terrain, and Extrude tools.

                            MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                            • B Offline
                              bhbarchitects
                              last edited by

                              pbacot

                              thanks for the reply, i have found that results are better when starting from scratch with sandbox, but most of the time i use google earth import or i am supplied contour data. I have artisan and all of thom thom's plugins just need more time and a little guidance on how to use them.

                              Just waiting for the job to go into planning then i will share the visuals, i have removed all the buildings in the screen grab and its quite a large development. Just buying lumion so should be a flythough as well.

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                              • B Offline
                                bhbarchitects
                                last edited by

                                As promised enclosed is the fly through of Wedgwood, first time using Lumion so improvements can be made including adding music transitions and how to use adobe premiere!!

                                Thanks for everyones help and advise,now off to play with Thea.

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