Hi everyone! Let me know if you have any questions in the comments down below! Remember you can download the example files at www.theSketchUpEssentials.com/30Days
Hi Justin, your videos rock - for both content and teaching quality. One comment on this lesson 8: I was a little confused when you refer to the stair treads as "risers" which are the vertical parts between the treads. Treads are the horizontal surfaces we step on. Is that what you meant? Thanks for all the great lessons and tips on using Sketchup!
SAVE OFTEN! I got 3/4 of the way through when Sketchup crashed. Lost all my work 😪 I've found that going through the tutorials twice really helps, so not a real big loss.
Justin. You're my goto channel for Sketchup. Will you be doing a new series using Sketchup for iPad and iMac? There is no right click (that I know of) on an Apple mouse.
How are you zooming and moving around while also dragging and item? For example, you move the railing base from the bottom stair to the top tread while maneuvering your view. It seems like you are always using two hands at the same time. I'm using the mouse with my right hand and then clicking shortcuts on my keyboard with the left hand. What am I missing?
Just for clarity, in construction terminology the elements your are calling 'risers' are in fact called treads(that which one would tread upon). A riser a vertical piece that would be added to close in at the back between each tread to add strength to the assambly. Otherwise, Great job.
Good tutorial but two mistakes: 16.5' is not 16 feet 5 inches. And the cable shouldn't align with the top rail base, it should align with the second top one.
Hi everyone! Let me know if you have any questions in the comments down below! Remember you can download the example files at www.theSketchUpEssentials.com/30Days
Hi Justin, your videos rock - for both content and teaching quality. One comment on this lesson 8: I was a little confused when you refer to the stair treads as "risers" which are the vertical parts between the treads. Treads are the horizontal surfaces we step on. Is that what you meant? Thanks for all the great lessons and tips on using Sketchup!
SAVE OFTEN!
I got 3/4 of the way through when Sketchup crashed. Lost all my work 😪
I've found that going through the tutorials twice really helps, so not a real big loss.
Hey Justin I watched a video of yours from awhile back about figuring out stairs and this one is way easier! Thanks for the simplification.
I really appreciate your useful videos. Amazing step by step tutorials for beginners like me.
Happy to help!
Man you're the best and excellent.
Justin. You're my goto channel for Sketchup. Will you be doing a new series using Sketchup for iPad and iMac? There is no right click (that I know of) on an Apple mouse.
How are you zooming and moving around while also dragging and item? For example, you move the railing base from the bottom stair to the top tread while maneuvering your view. It seems like you are always using two hands at the same time. I'm using the mouse with my right hand and then clicking shortcuts on my keyboard with the left hand. What am I missing?
The click wheel (assuming you have one) on your mouse will allow you to zoom in/out while dragging an item.
Well done 😍
Thanks!
Just for clarity, in construction terminology the elements your are calling 'risers' are in fact called treads(that which one would tread upon). A riser a vertical piece that would be added to close in at the back between each tread to add strength to the assambly. Otherwise, Great job.
Yeah that bugged me. But I'm easily bugged.
For figuring out the spacing we could also draw a line depicting the total height and divide the line into equal riser heights
That would work too - I did that with the spiral staircase video
whats the first math with 12? what is the 12 standing for? like, you measure the height wich is 11,6 and the stair space is 7 3/4..
Just a note, that Sketchup doesn't work properly on my (older)Mac in Safari. I switched to FireFox and it works fine.
First like 😀
Love it! :)
Good tutorial but two mistakes: 16.5' is not 16 feet 5 inches. And the cable shouldn't align with the top rail base, it should align with the second top one.