A Welcome Message to New SketchUcation Members
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Another Newbie here... I am a custom cabinet designer/draftsman/engineer and I am attempting to use SU to create cover pages with renderings for print sets and renderings for the shop to use during construction- and I naturally ran into a problem. How do I get two complex geometries like crown moulding to join at a corner and create the 45 degree miter? Interior corners I can do (sort of) but exterior corners are eluding me.
Help me, Obi Wan, you're my only hope!!Thanks-
Brandon -
Hi Brandon and welcome. Please, have a look at these YouTube videos. They are really great at explaining the nature of the Follow me tool:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=sketchup+follow+me+tool&search_type=&aq=f -
@gaieus said:
Hi Brandon and welcome. Please, have a look at these YouTube videos. They are really great at explaining the nature of the Follow me tool:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=sketchup+follow+me+tool&search_type=&aq=fThanks Gaieus, that was exactly what I needed. I could have saved myself some time and frustration if I would have watched all the tutorials instead of just the first few... Ah well...
Thanks again! -
Hi everyone. I just joined a few days ago as a complete beginner. I've done this back to front because I seemed to have made a a few mistakes so my 1st intro is lost in a "black whole".
I've got plenty of time now to learn new things with Sketch Up but SketchUcation seems more to me as a newbie. They are great, and friendly on the 'SketchUp' forum as they all are willing to help but it sometimes goes far above me.
So I'm raring to go, as I already got something new from Gaieus. I'll be a pest by asking a lot of questions as I go along.jacm
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Hi John (again) and welcome (again)
Never mind being a "pest" - after all a forum - especially a "Newbie Forum" is the ideal place for this.
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Hi..I came across this excellent site while searching for woodworking tips and tricks.
I have a couple of questions.....I'm running a Mac Intel (new model) 10.6 and SU keeps on crashing on me. My models are very very simple 2D drawings of a window.
Is there a link to the Sketch-up tools anywhere? One comes across answers in the threads and these may mention a tool that you haven't used...eg x-ray (at least I think it's a tool). It would be great to have a window open on a link where you could go straight to it and look up -x-ray and where it is in the toolset menus and what it briefly does.
Thanks guys
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Hi "Countryman" and welcome!
As for your display issues, I will probably not be able to help as I am on a PC although you can try to disable hardware acceleration to check if it is not a graphic card problem - this is under the Sketchup menu > Preferences > OpenGL settings on the Mac.
As for some reference manual, there is an abundance of info in the SU Help Centre like this "Reference Guide"
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Thanks for the welcome. Will check OpenGL although as it is a new Mac I'd have hoped that these issues were long sorted...I found posts about this going back to 2008.
Re reference manual...you've proved my point! Take X-Ray, for example. It doesn't appear anywhere obvious that I can see in that guide. I found it in the Google SketchUp 7 Quick Reference guide under Face Style. But Face Style doesn't appear in the Reference Guide either. Nor could I see Dynamic Components. They are probably there but filed away under something completely different and that is one of my gripes from a new users' perspective....the lack of consistency in presentation and naming/filing of information. I tried searching for X-Ray in Google but then you get many posts with questions that I don't even begin to comprehend.
Using the Search Bar in the Reference Guide does yield results but again proves my point re inconsistency. Putting in x-ray and clicking on the first link takes you to the Styles Browser Face panel. Now is that the same as Face Style? It is. So why not name it the same as the Quick Reference Card?
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Well, what i know that on my PC, I can activate a whole bunch of toolbars - including the face styles toolbar - from the View menu > Toolbars. Another place where you shopuld be able to access them is at View menu > Face styles.
Setting and modifying the styles instead of a quick toggle button for X-Ray may not be the best thing as that is always harder/slower than toggling it on/off.
What you can do in X-ray mode is to access edges behind faces, too. So it is not even only a simple "styling" tool but often needed when you want to access something deeply hidden/covered in a complex model.
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Hello Everyone. I am a new user and a new member...Richard
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Hi Richard!
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Welcome Richard!
paul
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Ah, to be a n00b again... wow, I feel young.
So hello everyone, I'm not that new to sketchup, been working on it for 2 years now. But for some reason it didn't occur to me that out there in the vast world of the internet there could be a forum for people like me, now I feel like I've been living under a rock! (a big one btw)
Been lurking around since yesterday, but decided to come out of the shadows to thank the people that have made such useful topics that have helped me realise that sketchup is as unlimited as human imagination is!
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Hi Cecilia and welcome!
Hope you find some bits useful here and also you'll show off with your works, too!
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Hello everyone
I am new here and have never used a forum before. I was a Architectural draftsman for round about 18 years. I changed to outside plant fiber optic design when the economy tanked. I started using Google Earth to do base sheets for my design work and ran across Sketch Up a few weeks ago and fell in love. I am out here now trying to soak up everything I can.I am using the 7.1 free version
There two things I would like to find out.-
What is the best way to print architecturally formated drawings,(Plans, Elevations and sections) and save these layouts for editing later?
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How do I create a mesh to represent the ground to set my house model on?
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Hi John and first of all welcome!
As for architectural printing and presentation, the best choice would be to go Pro and use LayOut (an additional, 2D presentational tool interactively working with SU). Until you make up your mind, here are a couple of links how you can print to scale:
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=36227
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=114462
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=114459As for terrain modelling, use the Sandbox tools:
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=38496
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=115432
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=95050
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=95052
http://sketchup.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=116694(I'm not going to link every Help Center article here now as you can go on along the links there)
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Gaieus
Thanks for your help. I will check out all the links and be back soon.John
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If you want I can make a tutorial for the smoove tool (The one you use to make terrain)
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Hi!
I have been playing around with SketchUp for a couple of weeks now, mostly designing a utility rail, rack mount, and accessory system for my snowmobile. For such a simple program, the things you guys (and gals) are doing are amazing, far beyond anything I would likely ever attempt. My background is in carpentry and cabinetry, and most of my projects to this point were done in 2D drawing programs like CorelDraw. I hope to spend a little time surfing this site, learning about what I can do with this fantastic tool kit that is SketchUp. I will try to save most of my n00by questions until I have a better chance to look around.
Thanks in advance.
Chip -
Hi Dwayne and welcome!
@fishin_chip said:
My background is in carpentry and cabinetry...
...so I have added you to the Woodworker usergroup and now you can see (and post in) the Woodworking forum.
@fishin_chip said:
I will try to save most of my n00by questions until I have a better chance to look around.
Take your time to look around but don't hesitate to as if you feel stuck somewhere.
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