Great value for everyone interested in 3D modeling! Watching this (especially when you said "there is million ways to do that") the idea came up in my mind - please, prepare even a bit simpler example but with several ways to solve it. Show us e.g. 5 ways to achieve the same interesting effect.
Nikita, Thanks for all the great tutorials. I will take your full course once I complete all your free lessons. I have a suggestion for a different type of lesson. The objects are simple but their manipulation is the point. Placing with gravity. Step 1 Create a cupboard with a couple shelves. Step 2 Create a plate and duplicate it a few times. Step 3 Place a plate on a shelf. Step 4 Create a stack of plates on the shelf. Step 5 Add a shelf to the top, tilted up 60 degrees. (Like for displaying antique plates.) Step 6 Lean some more of the plates against the new shelf. Step 7 Create a simple cup. Duplicate it. Step 8 Add hooks to the underside of a shelf. Step 9 Hang the cups on the hooks. I want to see how solid objects can interact. Is this possible in Plasticity without just carefully moving the pieces?
@@nikita.kapustin Thanks Nikita. The reason I was asking is that I am trying to use Plasticity to design cabinetry for a van camper. I first built the container area and was trying to see how to add the objects inside the camper. I will need to look at some other tool for that design perhaps. I love your tutorials and am using it for 3D printing designs.
Awesome lesson Nikita, great one to get warmed up with this morning!
Nikita for president!
Great value for everyone interested in 3D modeling! Watching this (especially when you said "there is million ways to do that") the idea came up in my mind - please, prepare even a bit simpler example but with several ways to solve it. Show us e.g. 5 ways to achieve the same interesting effect.
Nikita, Thanks for all the great tutorials.
I will take your full course once I complete all your free lessons.
I have a suggestion for a different type of lesson.
The objects are simple but their manipulation is the point. Placing with gravity.
Step 1 Create a cupboard with a couple shelves.
Step 2 Create a plate and duplicate it a few times.
Step 3 Place a plate on a shelf.
Step 4 Create a stack of plates on the shelf.
Step 5 Add a shelf to the top, tilted up 60 degrees. (Like for displaying antique plates.)
Step 6 Lean some more of the plates against the new shelf.
Step 7 Create a simple cup. Duplicate it.
Step 8 Add hooks to the underside of a shelf.
Step 9 Hang the cups on the hooks.
I want to see how solid objects can interact. Is this possible in Plasticity without just carefully moving the pieces?
You have to place them manually in Plasticity. No physics.
@@nikita.kapustin Thanks Nikita. The reason I was asking is that I am trying to use Plasticity to design cabinetry for a van camper. I first built the container area and was trying to see how to add the objects inside the camper. I will need to look at some other tool for that design perhaps. I love your tutorials and am using it for 3D printing designs.
Would you only use this for 3d print or engineering.my deal breaker is I can't texture anything otherwise great program