View allAll Photos Tagged Sketchup
Wieuca Baptist Church: Sketchup model using Google Earth surface image. Model representing collaboration between church and developer for a new parking deck, church addition, and two new mixed-use high rises. A video animation of model was created as well to present the design to the church.
Athens FPC: This model represents a work from three different people. I was charged with completing the model and creating presentation renderings of the model.
Free Chapel: This model is a study model and part of a master planning effort for a phase 2 design for this large evangelical church.
We have the IKEA Gulliver crib, not the one shown here. We also have the Poang chair in birch with brown leather. The wall color here is supposed to be Benjamin Moore "Apple Green" - I used the RGB values from the Benjamin Moore website to reproduce the color in Sketchup.
Small trader's transport for trading between settlements, docking with a vertical gangway. It's a repulsorlift-only barge. They're a good way to avoid the ground-based raiders and a lot cheaper than a starship.
Really enjoying practicing SketchUp lately. I love the minimalism of it.
3d model in sketchup
I took some liberties with the design of the standard battleship used by the imperial navy. The result is this.
SketchUp users can download this model here.
My wife wanted a hammock for the backyard, and Sketchup came to the rescue. I found the easiest way to build in Sketchup is to build a bunch of standard lumber sizes and use them over and over again. I can't wait to make it...
Since this was featured on the Make Blog, lots of people have stopped by! Anyone that wants a copy of this model, let me know, I'll be glad to send it to you. Be sure and leave me a comment to let me know what you think!
I've been using the free Google Sketchup program to remodel our kitchen while in reality, it's currently ripped out to the studs. I used the Podium plugin to add lighting. Not quite finished - need to add the tile backsplash to the sink side of the kitchen, and need to add the door jambs.
I start to design a Wright Gemini 3 from scratch using the software Trimble Sketchup. Depending on the detail, I could take a short/long time.
Small trader's transport for trading between settlements, docking with a vertical gangway. It's a repulsorlift-only barge. They're a good way to avoid the ground-based raiders and a lot cheaper than a starship.
Really enjoying practicing SketchUp lately. I love the minimalism of it. And that it's free.
The real deal next to the SketchUp version!
All parts finally arrived today and took me an hour or so to piece together.
Bare minimum price of parts from Bricklink totalled $68
quick sketchup for an engine I've been dreaming to build. I normally don't tend to do hand drawings of my planned engines, but right now I have no other way to do it.
Not sure if this works, but it shows hoe I intend to make the tender curve-friendly :)
the middle wheel will move sideways and connected to the outer wheels, they will be turned
anyone able to guess the engine? :)
I needed some random art for the walls for this Sketchup image, so I used some of my favorites I've saved to my computer.
Nagra III tape recorder. Modeled in SketchUp.
This little recorder made a big impact on the motion picture industry in the sixties, and I've always thought it is a beautiful example of perfectly executed product design.
Here's an interesting article about the Nagra recorder and its inventory:
Here are some objects I've printed in 3D using Shapeways.com! The boxes were designed in Google Sketchup, and the ornament was modeled in TopMod.
These pictures represent 3 different materials. The ornament is made using selective laser sintering, which yields a very strong plastic with a rough surface.
The metal box is printed in stainless steel. The process involves a few steps. First, the object is printed layer by layer with stainless steel mixed with a binder. Then it is fired, evaporating the binder, and melting the stainless steel together. It makes a porous stainless steel matrix. Next, they infuse the entire object in bronze, making a solid object, ready for polishing. The resulting object is nice and heavy, but due to the process, it came out just a tiny bit smaller than I expected.
The white plastic box uses FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling). Basically a thin stream of plastic is melted and zig-zagged layer by layer to build up the surface. It's dimensionally accurate, but not as strong as the other methods shown.
There is a spot beside my new steps at the front of the house. Wanted to decorate it because there was the stub of a planned rain-drain and it is ugly.
What better than to make a planter box so I can plant some flowers?
The first 2 versions are so bad I won't bother posting it.