
#Weld sketchup plugin install
Trimble SketchUp now hosts a repository for SketchUp plugins that one can access and install directly from SketchUp Make or Pro. Thanks to all the rockstar Ruby scripters out there who make the modeling world a better place.As mentioned previously, SketchUp 2014 has a new scheme for installing plugins. We're assuming all our readers practice good model hygiene, but it's great for the times you can't avoid that sloppy 3D warehouse model.

Great when you've got a lot of loose, ungrouped geometry that you want to organize into something usable. Let's face it, all of Vali's "Instant" tools are pretty dreamy. Available for a chill $7/year from Vali Architects, Instant Terrain can remedy all of your terrain simplifying woes. Selecting into the surface and using Selection Toys to grab just the lines, you can Soft and Smooth to our heart's content. This extension drapes a continuous, triangulated surface over ANYTHING. This one doesn't come up often but when it does, this extension is your friend. Catenaries are the shapes that cables and wires take when they're hanging from both ends, and the arc tool doesn't quite cut it. Zorro is a wonderful tool for cutting the fat it makes it easy to chop off geometry around the edges of your model that you don't need without having to intersect anything or enter into components or groups. Have a line of fencing you created with the PathCopy extension? Need to get them to fall cleanly onto a piece of terrain? DropGC will get it done. This is a great shortcut for dropping objects to a contoured surface. During a recent terrain shaping project, Yana became very fond of this set, especially the "Contour Tool" and the "Project Down Tool". The "flatten selection" tool is especially handy when you're tracing and can't quite get a face to form for some maddening reason. This set of tools comes in handy working on large models with buildings and terrain. My favorite feature of this tool is the radial bend. Phew!Īn expansion of how you can normally scale with the native tools in SketchUp. In your working model, select "Retrieve from Memory" to bring up the view. With both models open, capture your view from the first model and select "Put to Memory". Great for when you're working between versions of models and want to duplicate scenes. This wonderful extension captures camera views from one model, and allows you to recall it exactly.


Occasionally, veerrrry long sequences will require an extra application of the extension (maybe two) but Weld has never failed us. We use it to prevent extra edges popping up when using the Push-Pull tool on traced geometry.

Use it to join loose edges into a smooth curve you can select in one click. This is another vital one (aren't they all?). If you've ever accidentally clicked out of a selection in SketchUp, no matter the size, you've felt the pain of not having this extension. We use this a lot in a variety of ways, e.g., hiding bounding edges, selectively applying materials, and more. You can selects/deselect only edges, groups, components, or entities that have specific properties (hidden, soft/smooth, etc.). Allows you to filter objects in and out of an existing selection. This is an ESSENTIAL extensions for all modelers and for any kind of modeling. Here are some of the extensions we just can’t live without: Our FPS toolbox is vast, but very specialized. If there's something you wish SketchUp could do.there's probably an extension for that. Part of what makes it so great is the plugins, (or, as SketchUp calls them "extensions"): not only are there just tons of them, but there are always new ones to keep an eye out for. We here at Fat Pencil Studio use SketchUp, like, A WHOLE LOT.
