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SketchUp 2014 for Architectural Visualization

You're reading from   SketchUp 2014 for Architectural Visualization Create stunning photorealistic and artistic visuals of your SketchUp models

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783558414
Length 448 pages
Edition Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

SketchUp 2014 for Architectural Visualization Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Quick Start Tutorial 2. Collecting a Toolset FREE CHAPTER 3. Composing the Scene 4. Modeling for Visualization 5. Applying Textures and Materials for Photorealistic Rendering 6. Entourage the SketchUp Way 7. Non-photoreal Visuals with SketchUp 8. Photorealistic Rendering 9. Postproduction in GIMP 10. Animations 11. Presenting Visuals in LayOut 12. Interactive Visualization Choosing a Rendering Software Index

Let's put it together


Now that you've got the skills to create animated scenes in SketchUp, it's time to put it all together. Using the skills you have learned, render out a couple more simple animated camera shots. Refer to Chapter 3, Composing the Scene, to get some more ideas on viewpoints and camera focal settings. I'm trying the following with our city scene:

  • Travel along the bridge approaching the city:

  • Top-down flyover emphasizing the height of buildings:

  • Slow travel along a road looking up at the sky:

  • Some close up shots:

  • Moving shadows or night shots:

  • Free-fall spinning camera:

  • Different SketchUp styles (Monochrome, Sketchy, Blueprint, and so on):

All this will then be mixed in with the main flythrough sequence. The beauty of this is that the audience gets a constantly fresh, changing perspective, rather than a monotonous flyover. These scenes are interspersed to create this variety. They're also used to mask over the bits of your flythrough that you don't particularly want to see.

Interesting...

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