Been using Rhino for ID for over 20 years, I’ve done a lot with Make 2D to create Line Art to later manipulate with Illustrator, used Keyshot for Toon Shaded Line Art, but never tried anything like this, looks fantastic, thanks for sharing!
hi thank you for sharing. I have an issue that my wood texture doesn't all go in the same direction, upper faces are horizontal for example. How do I solve this
Click on your geometry that has the material, then go to the properties (rainbow circle), then go to texture mapping (checkered cylinder) and do box mapping. From there you can increase or decrease the size of the texture.
When exporting in vector PDF, it can see the background as transparent, I believe, but exporting as a vector ruins a lot of things. Normally, what I do so I can easily pick out the background in Photoshop is have a solid-color background/hatch that I don't use anywhere else, so I can just color select it in Photoshop and then delete it to get transparency.
Hi. So a couple of things: 1 - your process works great. 2- you can also open the PDF export in PS and select the background and remove it. 3 - You can do view capture to file and do transparent background 4 - The reason why I am printing to PDF is because I have dimension strings and the lineweights of the dimension strings are very heavy in viewcapturetofile. So I print instead. 5 - If I did not have dimension strings, I would have just done viewcapturetofile with or without transparent background.
@@unitedstatesofdesign nice, where do you think i can find other examples of this method of japanese joinery? do u plan on making other tutorials about it?
I will be making other joinery videos. I mentioned one of the books I used as a reference, it's a Japanese joinery book, if you look up "Traditional Architectural Japanese Joinery" you'll find it.
this was a very great tutorial thankyou. do more of these
Thank you! More videos to come. Please share this channel with your colleagues to help the channel grow.
This is awesome!
Thank you! Please share with others.
Been using Rhino for ID for over 20 years, I’ve done a lot with Make 2D to create Line Art to later manipulate with Illustrator, used Keyshot for Toon Shaded Line Art, but never tried anything like this, looks fantastic, thanks for sharing!
I am really glad it helps!
amazing thank youu
Thank you! Please share with others!
Nice tutorial🙏🏽
Thank you!
Amazing 👏
Thank you
Great videooo!
Thank you!
Super interesting! Please also do the next one on rendering in Vray. 😊
beautiful thanks for the Presentation. where can i have the hatch of Wood that you Present
Thank you! If you check the description I added a link to download the texture.
hi thank you for sharing. I have an issue that my wood texture doesn't all go in the same direction, upper faces are horizontal for example. How do I solve this
Click on your geometry that has the material, then go to the properties (rainbow circle), then go to texture mapping (checkered cylinder) and do box mapping. From there you can increase or decrease the size of the texture.
When exporting in vector PDF, it can see the background as transparent, I believe, but exporting as a vector ruins a lot of things. Normally, what I do so I can easily pick out the background in Photoshop is have a solid-color background/hatch that I don't use anywhere else, so I can just color select it in Photoshop and then delete it to get transparency.
Hi.
So a couple of things:
1 - your process works great.
2- you can also open the PDF export in PS and select the background and remove it.
3 - You can do view capture to file and do transparent background
4 - The reason why I am printing to PDF is because I have dimension strings and the lineweights of the dimension strings are very heavy in viewcapturetofile. So I print instead.
5 - If I did not have dimension strings, I would have just done viewcapturetofile with or without transparent background.
Did u come up with this way of modeling it or did u use a reference?
I have been using Rhino since 2007, so I experiment a lot.
@@unitedstatesofdesign nice, where do you think i can find other examples of this method of japanese joinery? do u plan on making other tutorials about it?
I will be making other joinery videos. I mentioned one of the books I used as a reference, it's a Japanese joinery book, if you look up "Traditional Architectural Japanese Joinery" you'll find it.
@ thanks