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    [Tutorial > Modeling] How a Pro Builds a House in SU pt 1

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    • KrisidiousK Offline
      Krisidious
      last edited by

      ok that should fix it.... the link should work as a zip

      By: Kristoff Rand
      Home DesignerUnique House Plans

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      • GaieusG Offline
        Gaieus
        last edited by

        Very informative kristoff. Looking forward to the next stage πŸ˜†

        Gai...

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        • N Offline
          not registered yet
          last edited by

          I'm excited to see the next installment in this series! Keep it up!

          (rpargman)

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          • EdsonE Offline
            Edson
            last edited by

            hi kris,

            i am following your two tutorials with great interest and have a couple of questions to make you.

            are you starting from the assumption that there is no plan in dwg or dxf format for one to start with and that all there is is some image scanned from a mag or some other source? i ask that because tracing over a picture is not that easy, as there are no edges or endpoints to grab on to.

            what is the point of applying the plan as material on the larger rectangle? you suggest one to use proper thicknesses but the larger plan is out of scale. please explain this.

            why not trace the plan over the rightly scaled plan and then make copies of it to put on other layers as you suggest?

            please continue this amazing thread. regards.

            edson

            edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre β€’ brasil
            http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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            • GaieusG Offline
              Gaieus
              last edited by

              emahfuz, see Kristoff's step number 2 in order to get the scaling correct (as as close as possible).

              Inference locking helps to keep things straight / square / plumb. Applying the picture to a square as a texture allows you to draw straight onto the picture (now a SU plane) - you can always removed the picture again later on.

              Correct me if I'm wrong in my statements, please. πŸ˜‰

              Gai...

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              • N Offline
                not registered yet
                last edited by

                Guess What! I used HouseBuilder.rb to construct my house! Here is the file:

                (Invader ZIM)


                house_onstruct.skp

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                • GaieusG Offline
                  Gaieus
                  last edited by

                  Must be nice houses Invader!
                  Just I cannot get them run... (edit: OK: you fixed it now...)

                  http://users.atw.hu/swb/smile/raz.gif

                  BTW - this topic is about a particular tutorial in the Tutorials forum. Could you please not divert it?!

                  Gai...

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                  • EdsonE Offline
                    Edson
                    last edited by

                    hi juju,

                    i did step 2 exactly as told and got the plan scaled right. my mistake was probably having used the texture tool to make the image fit the larger rectangle.

                    from what you said the plane under the picture helps keep things straight and plumb. would not that happen if i traced the plan that is not on the rectangle?

                    thanks.

                    edson

                    edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre β€’ brasil
                    http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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                    • jujuJ Offline
                      juju
                      last edited by

                      Edson, what you're saying isn't quite making sense. The idea is to create a plane on which to "texture" the image plan and then trace it. It shouldn't be outside of the plane you created.

                      Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                      • EdsonE Offline
                        Edson
                        last edited by

                        juju, sorry about that. let me try again.

                        i imported the plan and scaled it, ok? then i drew a larger rectangle close to it and copied the scaled plan onto it. since the rectangle was bigger than the image there ensued a tiling effect. in trying to get rid of the tiling (by using Texture>>Position) i threw the plan off scale. so i ended up with two plans side by side, one scaled correctly and the other slightly bigger while all the tutorial suggested was to have one scaled plan "textured" on the plane.

                        i hope it makes some sense to you now.

                        edson

                        edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre β€’ brasil
                        http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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                        • GaieusG Offline
                          Gaieus
                          last edited by

                          Edson, you can also try to scale the "larger" rectangle in a way (not with the scale tool) but selecting the edge on the side you notice the tiling and moving it (make sure to lock the axis of movement) to the edge of the original drawing.
                          You can repeat this along the other axis. This way you end up with a rectangle which is perfectly covered with the image (and only one instance of it).

                          Gai...

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                          • C Offline
                            Charlie__V
                            last edited by

                            krisidious,

                            Many thanks for this,especially the scaling image part. :~)

                            C

                            Precision M1710/Win 7 Pro 64 bit/i-7 6920 Quad core 2.9 Ghz -3.8/16Gb ram/NVIDIA M5000M 8Gb

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                            • N Offline
                              Nick W
                              last edited by

                              Kris,

                              I've been walking through your process and it's very helpful and informative. I've learned a lot. Thanks for that Smile

                              What is the big orange line in your template (see attached)? I can't seem to track it down or hide it. It is congruent with the green axis and is visible only on the positive side of the origin.

                              Thanks!


                              housetemplate.gif

                              http://www.nrwiesneski.com

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                              • jujuJ Offline
                                juju
                                last edited by

                                The orange line is the direction where the sunlight is coming from. I use it on all my work to get accurate sun angles.

                                Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                                • N Offline
                                  Nick W
                                  last edited by

                                  If that is the case, do you know how to hide it?

                                  The orange line doesn't change when I change the position of the sun...

                                  I imagine it's something very simple... thanks in advance for your instructive help


                                  housetemplate2.gif

                                  http://www.nrwiesneski.com

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                                  • EdsonE Offline
                                    Edson
                                    last edited by

                                    uncheck it and the sun's direction will not show.


                                    location.png

                                    edson mahfuz, architect| porto alegre β€’ brasil
                                    http://www.mahfuz.arq.br

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                                    • N Offline
                                      Nick W
                                      last edited by

                                      Thanks guys!

                                      I just realized that the non-pro version probably doesn't have that feature, as I can't find it right now. Though I've seen it before, which confused me on several occasions (I have Pro at work, but not at home).

                                      Peace!
                                      nick

                                      http://www.nrwiesneski.com

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                                      • KrisidiousK Offline
                                        Krisidious
                                        last edited by

                                        it's the North Arrow... and you should have it in your model info

                                        go to the top of SketchUp...

                                        go to Window
                                        then to Model info
                                        then click on Location
                                        at the bottom it says Solar Orientation
                                        uncheck Show in Model.

                                        By: Kristoff Rand
                                        Home DesignerUnique House Plans

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                                        • N Offline
                                          Nick W
                                          last edited by

                                          It's not there as far as I can see... (see attached)

                                          maybe it's an issue with an older version? Version 6.0.515 is what I have installed here.

                                          however, I know that I've seen the "location" options before. I'm assuming it was while working on my work computer, which led me to the conclusion that it's a Pro vs not-Pro difference.


                                          model_info.gif

                                          http://www.nrwiesneski.com

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                                          • N Offline
                                            Nick W
                                            last edited by

                                            Here is the help text regarding setting location. This seems to confirm the lack of "Location" settings in the non-Pro version:

                                            @unknownuser said:

                                            Specifying a Model's Location in the World
                                            You can set the location of your model in all versions of SketchUp. However, the mechanism for setting location is different between SketchUp Pro and Google SketchUp (free).

                                            Setting Location in SketchUp Pro
                                            Use the Location panel in the Model Info dialog box (Window > Model Info > Location) to set the location for your model.

                                            Caution - Do not use the Location panel in the Model Info dialog box to change the location of a model after importing the current view from Google Earth (using the Google Plugin). Using the Location panel to position models in Google Earth will likely result in an incorrectly located model.

                                            Setting Location in Google SketchUp (free)
                                            Load Google Earth and navigate to the location where you model will exist (the town is sufficient). Use SketchUp's Get Current View button to import the current view, as well as the location, from Google Earth. You can hide or delete the Google Earth snapshots if you want to work without them (such as when doing a shadow study).

                                            http://www.nrwiesneski.com

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