Hello,I'm just learning Rhino and following you tutorial. I have problem with one step you make at 12:40. I fine until that, i cut the elipse but when i mark it for offset on a quarter of the elipse can be selected. I tried several times, copied every step you made but cannot select the complete elipse to offset on the cup surface. What can be the problem ?
This approach can sometimes be temperamental... Thanks for pointing it out and sorry for the trouble. Here's another way to offset a curve that will intersect the cup surface, allowing you to cut it. Step 1: Select the Handle. Step 2: In the Curve Menu > Curve From Objects > Duplicate Border. This command places a curve at each open end of the handle. Step 3: In the Right View, use , select one of the new curves at the top or bottom of the handle. Offset to the appropriate distance (type in value), click with the mouse to indicate which side of the curve to offset... you will click toward the outside of the curve. Step 4: In order to situate the new (larger) curve on the surface use the command. Select the curve (press Enter) and then select the cup as the 'Surface that pulls'... (press Enter). You can now proceed with cutting the cup using starting at 13:55. I hope this helps.
Thanks! This is very helpful. I tried following along exactly but then decided to make a more complicated shape for the profile of the handle (just a bit of a flattened ellipsoid, rather than a straight ellipse). I rebuilt the curve of the ellipse, adding some additional control points to adjust the shape. I made two similar flatter ellipses, did the Sweep 1 Rail command and made the handle. Followed along exactly as you have done, but now instead of that regular ellipse with a single edge, it interprets the edges of my handle and the hole in the body as segments, and it won't do the blend surfaces function correctly. Is there a way to fix this? Thanks!
You have to select the handle then write : "-hide" (don't forget the dash) and enter. For show the handle it's the other way you select and write "-show". I don't know the keyboard shortcut sorry
nice video. But why don't you connect the handle as a polysurface to the polysurface of the cup. Then you can simply round the contact curve. This is much easier and faster.
I am new to Rhino 6 also. Very calm and good tutorial, thank you. How do i do if i want the cup be for example 100 mm in diameter? Where can i resize the cup? Thank you for possible reply.
Thanks for your feedback. It is always best to begin building the model at the correct (or close to correct) scale. To adjust the model afterward, use the command in the dropdown menu and follow the prompts. This will give you the most control. For a quicker adjustment, you can also use the (red, blue, green widget visible when model is selected, if not type and select 'ON'). Click (and hold) one of the square handles on the to scale (1D) in one direction or type in a scale factor... hold down 'Shift' to scale uniformly in 3D. It will be easiest if you place a visual guide first, (draw a line or circle) marking the 100mm diametre and then the model to match. I hope this helps!
You should make more such videos.The way of your teaching was really helpful. Looking forward to get more such teaching videos. Thank you so much.
your voice and expression are so calm, thank you!
Nice one Greg, all clear. You should do more of beginner and intermediate 3D tutorial as this one. Thx
very helpful tutorial expecting to have more videos from you
@13:40 there is a way to edit the size (7 in this case) without using undo command?
Hello,I'm just learning Rhino and following you tutorial. I have problem with one step you make at 12:40. I fine until that, i cut the elipse but when i mark it for offset on a quarter of the elipse can be selected. I tried several times, copied every step you made but cannot select the complete elipse to offset on the cup surface. What can be the problem ?
This approach can sometimes be temperamental... Thanks for pointing it out and sorry for the trouble. Here's another way to offset a curve that will intersect the cup surface, allowing you to cut it. Step 1: Select the Handle. Step 2: In the Curve Menu > Curve From Objects > Duplicate Border. This command places a curve at each open end of the handle. Step 3: In the Right View, use , select one of the new curves at the top or bottom of the handle. Offset to the appropriate distance (type in value), click with the mouse to indicate which side of the curve to offset... you will click toward the outside of the curve. Step 4: In order to situate the new (larger) curve on the surface use the command. Select the curve (press Enter) and then select the cup as the 'Surface that pulls'... (press Enter). You can now proceed with cutting the cup using starting at 13:55. I hope this helps.
@@gregsims5218 Thank you so much for this detailed alternative, I followed and it worked perfectly for me . Thank you, lots of love and respect :))
When I offset curve on surface it is only doing half of the circle not the full circle, what is the issue
Thanks! This is very helpful. I tried following along exactly but then decided to make a more complicated shape for the profile of the handle (just a bit of a flattened ellipsoid, rather than a straight ellipse). I rebuilt the curve of the ellipse, adding some additional control points to adjust the shape. I made two similar flatter ellipses, did the Sweep 1 Rail command and made the handle. Followed along exactly as you have done, but now instead of that regular ellipse with a single edge, it interprets the edges of my handle and the hole in the body as segments, and it won't do the blend surfaces function correctly. Is there a way to fix this? Thanks!
Thank you very much! You explain so good!!! I got it all, and it's very usefull. :)
really good tutorial!
Hi Greg, thanks for this. Could you also add a few tutorials on how to construct well shaped spoons. Thanks.
great tutorial keep it up
Great video!
Hi, can I have the real image of the product that you refer ?
how he hide the handle in one point of the video?
You have to select the handle then write : "-hide" (don't forget the dash) and enter. For show the handle it's the other way you select and write "-show".
I don't know the keyboard shortcut sorry
How did u do handle? Please be more specific and I mean verrrrryyyyy specific
He shows the process in detail
Thank you very much, it was very useful for me
nice video. But why don't you connect the handle as a polysurface to the polysurface of the cup.
Then you can simply round the contact curve. This is much easier and faster.
now i am in a good mood
I am new to Rhino 6 also. Very calm and good tutorial, thank you. How do i do if i want the cup be for example 100 mm in diameter? Where can i resize the cup? Thank you for possible reply.
Thanks for your feedback. It is always best to begin building the model at the correct (or close to correct) scale. To adjust the model afterward, use the command in the dropdown menu and follow the prompts. This will give you the most control. For a quicker adjustment, you can also use the (red, blue, green widget visible when model is selected, if not type and select 'ON'). Click (and hold) one of the square handles on the to scale (1D) in one direction or type in a scale factor... hold down 'Shift' to scale uniformly in 3D. It will be easiest if you place a visual guide first, (draw a line or circle) marking the 100mm diametre and then the model to match. I hope this helps!
thank you, it is very usefull
thank you!
Thanks a lot!
this is asmr
❤❤❤