Hey Nate, Thanks for the good work. The strips in the air space are furring strips. They are usually run perpendicular to the siding, vertical or horizontal, vertical allows water to drain better. Thnx again
If you select objects that are on the layers, copy and paste those into the desired file those layers should populate into new document. I will have to take a closer look if there is another way to import layer settings/properties.
Sounds good curious if your considering purchasing. If you are a student I think it’s a little over kill you can get away with doing everything in rhino and learning how to do those things. If you are doing comercial or professionally might be worth it.
@@NatesStudioDesk yup, UG student and I'm using it lately - It's pretty Good and helpful for architectural design and design documentation but pretty slow in performance 🤏 and it would be great to learn something new from professional like you 😁
Hey Nate,
Thanks for the good work.
The strips in the air space are furring strips. They are usually run perpendicular to
the siding, vertical or horizontal, vertical allows water to drain better.
Thnx again
Thats what I was looking for.
From min 2:32, What is the width and length for the slab when you extrude it to 3D?
Also, how big is the circle(4:53)?
Looks like almost 8’ you can see in the command line too. Thanks for the comment!
Do you know how to save the layers you have set up and import into another rhino document? Great video as well very helpful.
If you select objects that are on the layers, copy and paste those into the desired file those layers should populate into new document. I will have to take a closer look if there is another way to import layer settings/properties.
@@NatesStudioDesk thank you
I'd like to see A visualarq project
Sounds good curious if your considering purchasing. If you are a student I think it’s a little over kill you can get away with doing everything in rhino and learning how to do those things. If you are doing comercial or professionally might be worth it.
@@NatesStudioDesk yup, UG student and I'm using it lately - It's pretty Good and helpful for architectural design and design documentation but pretty slow in performance 🤏 and it would be great to learn something new from professional like you 😁