Wednesday, January 2, 2013

How to Make Shoulder Pads


So I promised some time ago I’d show you how to make shoulder pads.  I’ve totally given up on the bell of lost souls contest so I’m just tossing this to my loyal followers on the blog.  I don’t have finished product pictures of my icons which just makes people a bit leery.  Couple that with the fact 3d design is a bit out of reach for the less tech savvy and you get a lot of people skimmed my tutorial but very few commented.  Doesn’t matter I don’t do this stuff to get money I do it because I enjoy it.

So shoulder pads

Now one quick disclaimer.  According to the depositions of the Chapterhouse Studios vs Games Workshop legal battle, Games Workshop claims copyright over the shape of shoulder pads. The judge has ruled in summary judgment that it is possible that GW can own the copyright.  Now this means two things, one that GW might own the shape of shoulder pads, IE a quarter ovoid with a raised rim, and two that CH must yet present evidence that implies otherwise.  Basically the shape of the shoulder pad is currently in contention.  As such if a person makes their own shoulder pads it may or may not be copyright infringement at this time.

Anyway let’s start with a sphere.  I’ve installed a free plugin called SCF Draw Tools.  It allows me to make shapes without the trouble of using the extrude or follow me functions that are normally needed to make a 2d shape a 3d object. Here I’ve started from a center point to make the sphere.



  


I’ve made the sphere approximately 8500 millimeters in diameter when scaled that will be 8.5mm. 
Of course a shoulder pad isn’t a sphere. Its an ovoid, its taller than it is wide. So we stretch it using the scale tool.  By grabbing the center handle and holding shift we can scale evenly along the axis.  Scaling up my 1.5 times should be about right.



Now obviously we need to break this down.  A shoulder pad is not a full ovoid, its one quarter of an ovoid. So we need to make this a quarter.  Now we are going to do this the hard way.  The Pro Version of Sketchup has these nice Boolean tools that let you intersect or union solid objects.  But I want to show you the freeway to do this. Let’s hope one day Trimble puts the boolean tools into the free version.  Till then we do things the hard way.

So join the ovoid into a group so it doesn’t interfere with the new geometry we are about to make.  And just to be safe lets hide it.  Now with the rectangle tool, starting at the center point of the axis, drag out a rectangle larger than the ovoid. Then use the extrude tool to make it a 3d rectangle. I like to do things in mirror so my shape rectangle only covers 1/8th the ovoid. This lets me modify one side of it and then mirror it down the center. It’s just lazier but it works.




Ok so now we have our two shapes but we need to intersect them.  We can do so by selecting the two objects and explode the two groups. Once they are no longer grouped select them then right click and choose “intersect faces with selection”  Now if we look at it transparent you’ll see the all the geometry is still present. But now where the two shapes overlap there are seems that we want to keep. We just need to delete the excess geometry we don’t want.




We go in with the eraser tool and remove the parts we don’t want.  This process isn’t necessary with the boolean tools in the Pro version but its not really worth the extra cost. There are some free plugins that offer versions of the boolean tools but I’ve never had good luck with them and since I have the Pro version I’ve never needed them.



Now we have the segment of the shoulder pad we need.  But we still need two things, the back needs hollowed to fit the arm, and the front needs a rim around the edge. So lets start with the hollow in the back.  Group the item again and then copy it.  Now use the “paste in place” function to put it back where it was.  Then switch to the scale function.  Using the corner handle scale it down so its slightly smaller.  You may have to play with it to size it correctly.  Once you have it how you want once more explode the shapes and intersect faces again.



Now we have the hollow shape so we can make the rim.  Start by copying the hollowed shape again. Then use the “paste in place” function.  Once you’ve done that use the scale tool just like before but scale it up so its larger than the original shape.


So now we need to take the center of the shape out to make it a rim.  We’ll use the same method we used before to do so.  Make a rectangular 3d object that is again larger than the original shape.  Now select the bottom and vertical edges use the “offset” tool on the side.  Then use the push pull tool to remove the main part and make an “L” shape.  Now we can combine the enlarged pad shape and the L to make the rim.  Once more using the explode and Intersect faces commands we can get the desired result.




At this point we have half a shoulder pad shape.  If we first select the geometry and tap the “control” key while using the move tool we can duplicate the design easily.  Then with the new geometry selected right click and choose “Flip Along” and select the appropriate axis.  Now just drag the geometry together so it is seemless.  At this juncture you can combine the two halves of the main body and the two halves of the rim together.  It’s important to keep the body of the pad and the rim of the pad separate for now.



Now we need to start on the icon for the shoulder pad.  To do so we need a plate that we will cut the icon out of.  We get this from copying the body of the shoulder pad, pasting it in place, and then enlarging it.  Here I’ve scaled the plate using the scale tool so its just slightly smaller than the rim I made. Don’t worry about the overhang at the back and bottom of the pad we’ll deal with that after we make our icon.



Now we need the icon itself.  Remember last time how I said keeping the different layers of the icon separate would be helpful.  This is where it will be helpful.  In this case we have 3 layers.  We are going to use each of these 3 layers as a cookie cutter to stamp out a layer for our icon.


To start put the 3 icons together like you’d want them to display.  Then using the move tool move them so they are centered around the same axis we are using to build our shoulder pad.  Once in place use the scale tool to stretch them so they are tall enough to pass through the shoulder pad.  Now we go back to the move tool.  When you select a single part with the move tool, you’ll see 4 “x” shaped points appear on each face. If we then select one it will allow us to rotate around the center of the object.  Rotate each layer of the icon so it goes through the face of the shoulder pad as shown below.


At this juncture we need to follow the same process we used before. First copy the plate.  Now select one of the icon layers and explode it and the plate. Now intersect with selection and remove the excess geometry. 



Once we have all the junk out of the way make the new shape a group and then paste the plate back in place so you can do the same thing to the other two icon parts.  Her we can see all 3 layers of the icon as their own rounded plate, while working I’ve hidden my shoulder pad body and rim so it’s not in the way.



We can now use the move tool to offset the layers giving them some relief to the design.  Select the layers you want to move, then select the move tool. Now hold the shift key to move the layers along an axis.  Here I’ve move it slightly along the green axis and blue axis to have this result.




Now we have a complete shoulder pad.  At this point if we have followed these steps our pad is complete. This multi-part file should print OK, but for the best results you should join all the faces and remove the internal geometry so its all one piece.  But if we want we can copy it to make multiples pads in a single file. We can rotate it to change orientation and so on.  Here I’ve duplicated the shoulder so it has 10 copies in a single file. Now I can scale it down by 1000% and use the STL export plugin to output it for shapeways.


Here are a couple pieces of advice to help new 3d modelers along. When I was first starting out the biggest problem I had was leaving geometry inside a model.  See when you make an STL and upload it for printing on Shapeways the process will combine each separate group into a “Shell” the shell has to be “watertight” in order for it to print.  That’s a fancy way of saying it has to be a solid 3d object.  Orphaned geometry hanging around either inside or outside a solid object will become its own shell because it’s not connected to anything.  But it’s a shell that can’t be printed because it’s not solid, it has a front but no back.  This means your print attempt will fail.  So it’s always a good idea to double check by going into each group and unhiding everything and removing the orphaned edges you might have missed.   The other problem I consistently had was what many at Shapeways call the “Wall thickness Lottery”.  Each material has specific rules regarding minimum thicknesses it can print in.  Unfortunately it’s very easy to have these thicknesses rejected if they are really close to the limitations.  Be mindful of your target material’s requirements and if necessary ask advise on the forums for guidance on how to resolve the issues you are having.  The shapeways community is quite friendly and willing to help.

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for this, this is really helpful! I'm working in blender, so I can't really follow step by step, but this helps to get an idea of the process.
    And I have a few quick questions, first, is there a way to follow your blog? I can't find a subscribe button or anything.
    And second, I read a bunch of your posts about GW's copyright claims against what you are making and it was really interesting. Where do you get your information about the chapterhouse lawsuit? It's kinda ridiculous that they're going after you since you make things that GW itself doesn't make. Like you said, you only expand the hobby, not take from it. I would understand if you just made replicas of their products at a lower price or something.
    Well thanks for the great posts and inspiring 3d models! I hope I can get as good at blender as you are at sketchup.

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  2. Hey Cpyke, In blogger you can subscribe to a blog by "following" it. Log in to blogger with your Gmail/google account. then go to dashboard at the top right edge of the page. Once there scroll down to the "add blog" section and add any blog you want to your reading list. It will both allow you to toggle through blogs with the next blog button and email you when updates occur.
    My information about the Chapter House lawsuit comes from public sources. Every so often Bell of Lost Souls will do a "legal watch" post about the suit. They post links to any documents that have been made public. The issue of Copyright and the Chapter House lawsuit in particular are important to me so I've read through everything I can find.
    I agree that there is room for both GW and myself to exist in the hobby, and since GW again posted record profits this year I'd say the market agrees. However that's not how Copyright works. I admit that some models that I have removed bare similarities (intended or not) to GW's products and that legally it is GW's privilege to have the income they receive off their designs protect. I will also agree that copyright is an increasingly archaic set of laws that have been repeatedly expanded by Corporate interest groups. I don't believe they are fair but legally speaking fairness is not protected under law. If you are venturing into 3d printing I suggest you read up on copyright to some extend as statistically you are more likely to be threatened for copyright violation than be struck by a car in the street.
    If you are interested in copyright check out this commentary on the current copyright system written and then withdrawn by the republican research council in November. It has a good in site into the both the intent of copyright and how it's not working. http://lauren.vortex.com/WITHDRAWN-Republican-Study-Committee-Intellectual-Property-Brief.pdf

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    1. Well hopefully something changes with copyright in the near future. It's funny because GW has plenty of money, but they go after people like you who don't even make a profit, or take away from their income. My wife and i have been building a small photography buisness, and we took engagement photos for a couple. We gave them their pictures, but right after that they stopped answering our e-mails and we never heard from them again. Since we can't afford a lawer we can't do anything about it. It seems like copyright should protect in situations like that. But instead it protects the corporations who wouldn't even notice the difference in profits (if there were any).

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    2. I understand where you're coming from. It's always disappointing when people can't just be honest. Sadly there is a tendency for corporations to be just as dishonest as your runaway couple. Perhaps more so because its harder to make them accountable when they have the power to change the laws they are accountable to. For your issue I would suggest not a lawyer but a collections agency. They will likely have better results than a legal team and be much cheaper.
      I do agree copyright needs to change and the only way that will happen is if concerned individuals spread the word about why it needs to change.

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