Thank you for the feedback Sabin! I'm happy it was helpful. In case you haven't seen them, I have presented two more Grasshopper webinars with Novedge that you might find interesting: Designing 3D Patterns with Rhino and Grasshopper - th-cam.com/video/m7tJGZFW8vY/w-d-xo.html and Parametric 3D modeling techniques in Rhino and Grasshopper - th-cam.com/video/-YGR9jQ-1w4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks to all participants, we hope this was interesting and you got some useful information. We had to rush a bit through the applications and skipped some interesting content, but we wanted to give an introduction for those who were not familiar with the software. We'll soon cover these applications in dedicated videos and/or with a new live event. If you have any request or feedback please leave a comment! Thank you
Hello, great video. I have a question, I am using Blender (a mesh modeling tool similar to Maya and Cinema 4D) for car exterior modeling and want to import that geometry from blender to Rhino, to use it for algorithmic modeling in Grasshopper. I imported the file as .obj and it is converted into a mesh in rhino. How can I import geometry from other mesh modeling tools and have it as a subD geometry in Rhino? So that, I can use it in Grasshopper. Thankyou
Thank you very much for this webinar. I'm learning grasshopper but really slowly due lack of time:) IAnd I have on question that I couldn't find the answer to. Is it possible to have a parametric design running over multiple surfaces? Like from the sole of a shoe running to side of the sole with quite a drastic curvature change. Thanks in advance.
Richard Vink hi Richard, thanks for watching and for the comment. I assume you want to apply some sort of pattern to a polysurface made of multiple surfaces, so that it is continuous across the edges. In general it can be done but it depends on the specific case. There are different possible approaches that involve either nurbs or meshes. In general once you have a clear idea of the final pattern look and design you can then find the appropriate modeling strategy. If you like you can send me a picture to my email marco AT marcotraverso.it and I’ll try to give you some more specific indications
You need to feed into the inputs of the Rectange component the domains rather than the absolute size: for example a size of 100 needs to be turned into a '-50 To 50' Domain. You can do it by dividing the size by 2, use a Negative component and then connect the two values to a Construct Domain component.
Thank you for your contribution, and for your amazing designs, definitely make this world better.
Wow, what a comment, thank you! We try to do our part in showcasing good designs and sharing some information and knowledge
Mind Blown! Great video!!!
Thanks a lot for the introduction, Marco! Just what I was looking for - clear and straightforward.
Thank you for the feedback Sabin! I'm happy it was helpful.
In case you haven't seen them, I have presented two more Grasshopper webinars with Novedge that you might find interesting:
Designing 3D Patterns with Rhino and Grasshopper - th-cam.com/video/m7tJGZFW8vY/w-d-xo.html
and
Parametric 3D modeling techniques in Rhino and Grasshopper - th-cam.com/video/-YGR9jQ-1w4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks to all participants, we hope this was interesting and you got some useful information. We had to rush a bit through the applications and skipped some interesting content, but we wanted to give an introduction for those who were not familiar with the software. We'll soon cover these applications in dedicated videos and/or with a new live event. If you have any request or feedback please leave a comment! Thank you
Good Tutorial for beginners
very,very cool video. please load some more video's here!
Can you post the example files you were using in this webinar so we can study your grasshopper models?
is there any place to find the rhino files?
Hello, great video. I have a question, I am using Blender (a mesh modeling tool similar to Maya and Cinema 4D) for car exterior modeling and want to import that geometry from blender to Rhino, to use it for algorithmic modeling in Grasshopper. I imported the file as .obj and it is converted into a mesh in rhino. How can I import geometry from other mesh modeling tools and have it as a subD geometry in Rhino? So that, I can use it in Grasshopper. Thankyou
very informing 1 THANK YOU ALOT !!!
Thank you for watching and for the feedback!
very awesome!!!
Thank you Tam!
Thank you very much for this webinar. I'm learning grasshopper but really slowly due lack of time:)
IAnd I have on question that I couldn't find the answer to. Is it possible to have a parametric design running over multiple surfaces? Like from the sole of a shoe running to side of the sole with quite a drastic curvature change. Thanks in advance.
Richard Vink hi Richard, thanks for watching and for the comment. I assume you want to apply some sort of pattern to a polysurface made of multiple surfaces, so that it is continuous across the edges. In general it can be done but it depends on the specific case. There are different possible approaches that involve either nurbs or meshes. In general once you have a clear idea of the final pattern look and design you can then find the appropriate modeling strategy. If you like you can send me a picture to my email marco AT marcotraverso.it and I’ll try to give you some more specific indications
Thanks for the quick answer. You're correct. I mean a polysurface. WIll send you an image with an example.
@@richardvink_art OK, I'll wait for your email.
please, can you let me know how to center the rectangle to each point? thanks
You need to feed into the inputs of the Rectange component the domains rather than the absolute size: for example a size of 100 needs to be turned into a '-50 To 50' Domain. You can do it by dividing the size by 2, use a Negative component and then connect the two values to a Construct Domain component.
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cbd