Another Steam Engine
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I think the style suits the subject matter and they are great. Any chance I can use these as art on the walls of my renders?
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Those "antique print" styles are excellent!
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@bryan k said:
Those "antique print" styles are excellent!
Of your many styles I believe these two are my favorites β¦ Simply fantastic
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Yeah, that nails it!
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Thanks all.
Mike, I'll have to give some thought to that. Which images specifically?
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I'm asking about the sepia type renders/images.
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Here's another one in progress.
This is based on dimensions in an article from a magazine published in January 1924. Many of the larger parts were available as castings and only the dimensions for machining them are included in the article. That required a forensic approach to modeling it. As an example the diameters of the cylinders weren't given so they had to be determined from the piston diameters. -
Sweet
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Wow! Fantastic detail!
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Cooking on gas.
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Excellent as always!
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Very cool.
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Another cracking piece you have there.
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Fantastic! Indeed some of these would deserve to be printed and hanged in some industrial based interior designs!
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Dave, you could make some decent money selling these as card/paper models. Flattery etc can help but check out https://www.papermodelers.com/forum/railway-related-builds/ , the railway type would seem closest to your steam engines.
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Dave,
Very nice work, I am very impressed. I have been "modeling" for a short time and now would like to dip my toe into steam engine "animation". I saw your video of the Muncaster "automation". Another "home run".
I have tinkered with MS Physics a bit, I really haven't got my head wrapped around the tool' methodology. I was wondering which animation tool did you used on the Muncaster (Ms Physics, Animator, Key Frame or other)??
Again, nice work on all of your models.
bexar
Southeast Queensland -
@bexar thank you.
My animations of the various steam engine models were done without using any "animation tools". I just use copies of components, tag visibility, scenes, and the native animation export option straight out of SketchUp. For me that's straightforward and simple.
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