The Great Art Component Thread
-
L'Île des morts : Arnold Böcklin - 1880 Bale -
Isle of the Dead : Oil Painting (first version / 5)
-
Kristoff, would it not be better to purge all the scenes and section cuts etc from your models before posting them.
Also if you are going to the trouble of creating models surely it would be more useful to have them as glue to components that you can hang on the wall in a simple and realistic manner. Otherwise all you are doing is supplying a frame of your choice with an image in it that could be easily downloaded from google.
In the attached Skp is your frame remade with components and a Constable landscape put together as a glue to component with a hook. When added to a model it will hang naturally on the wall as if on a wire. It can always be unglued and positioned flat if need be.
-
Great avatar btw...
-
I thought I had purged them... But scenes and section cuts won't purge, they have to be deleted. I didn't do that. I'll go back through them and fix them. Good catch...
Personally I don't like glue-to components... They flip around crazy if you touch the wrong surface. I'd just rather have my comps be vertical.
Yeah the tilt forward is a nice effect.
My frames are kinda heavy. I used profile builder and they geometry is a bit much. The over all idea is to have these ready to go. even though it's easy to do it still takes 10-15 minutes to search it out, build it to real size, research the image and get it done.
-
ok they should be fixed. scenes and sections removed.
-
-
I'm just going to send them all to you for cleanup Box... somehow it got components and materials back in it. I might have uploaded the wrong file. fixed.
-
Artist: Paul Cezanne
Mont Sainte-Victoire
Completion Date: c.1895
Dimensions: 73 x 92 cm -
Interestingly it was the Monet that I downloaded and cleaned without noticing that you had got them either swapped or both the same.
So the Monet needs looking into.
It's also not a bad idea to make them components, since you did call this a component thread, and it would help if they were orientated so that when you use Camera Front you actually see them from the front.I know I'm getting annoying now but you created the thread and gave it rules, so you should start as you want others to continue, otherwise you'll just end up with a thread full of 3D warehouse style random junk that isn't worth downloading.
-
I'll kick it off.
Young Hare
by German artist Albrecht Dürer.
1502 watercolor -
Monet
Le Bassin Aux Nymphéas - (Water Lily Pond)
1919
100.4 × 201 cm (39½ × 79⅛ in) -
I was under the impression that a component was just an skp that was saved into the component directory... How would you go about making it a component?
The Monet is so big because the texture is so big. it's 990kb by itself. I hate blurry textures. it could be optimized... but people can do that if they need to.
You're right they do need to face front. So I went through and fixed them. They should all be front facing now.
Don't worry about criticism... just makes the library better and I learn. So win/win.
-
@krisidious said:
I was under the impression that a component was just an skp that was saved into the component directory... How would you go about making it a component?
You've confused me a bit with this, do you only make components by saving a whole skp to the component directory? Or am I misunderstanding you?
Select the geometry you want and right click and make component. This component can then be dragged from your in model component window to any component library window. It can then be used in other files. I guess that's what you mean by the component directory.
-
I right click make component and then right click save as when I'm inside a larger model. But, when I'm in a blank instance of sketchup I just save the model.
If you're just working on a component itself there's no reason to go through the other steps, unless like me your template has sections and layers and scenes in it. then the right click function will cleave that stuff off.
-
Ok I understand, but if you open the file, rather than stick it in your component library and bring it in as a component, it is an open component.
Advertisement