18 of 18 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great ways to present your SketchUp models, May 27 2010
By Bonnie Roskes - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Sketchup 7.1 for Architectural Visualization (Paperback)
I'm a SketchUp author myself, and my books have always focused on how to use SketchUp itself - modeling methods, etc. This book is different: it shows how to go from SketchUp into a presentation, either graphic or video.
The book is an impressive piece of work, and the author's writing style is not only informative and easy to read, but also pretty darn funny. (Humor should be used more often in tech books. Keeps readers awake!)
The book has two main focuses:
(1) Showing the best ways to use SketchUp, with an eye out for eventual model presentation. This includes keeping poly counts low, making the most of digital images, using components, entourage, etc. This book isn't about object modeling techniques per se, but de Jongh does discuss a bit of that as well.
(2) Creating the presentation itself. This includes not only "how-to's" for rendering and video apps, but also how to set up SketchUp scenes, layers, walkthroughs, and styles to ease the transition into a presentation.
The best part is that nearly all of the applications discussed in this book are FREE. There's a lot about Kerkythea for rending, and GIMP and VirtualDub for image processing and animation. It's amazing what you can do with freeware!
The book ends with a chapter on LayOut, for SketchUp Pro users, and a very useful index comparing a bunch of SketchUp renderers.
A few minor complaints:
* The subtitle "Beginner's Guide" is a bit misleading because a beginning SketchUp user would have trouble making heads or tails of the modeling concepts. Logically, I know the "beginner" refers to someone looking to learn presentation methods, but that could be made clearer with a different subtitle.
* The graphics are grayscale, which is short of shame in a book on "knock 'em out" presentations. My own books cost a lot to print in color, so I understand the economic issues. But my Google SketchUp Cookbook has color graphics, with a similar page count and price. Same for the new Site Design book by Daniel Tal. That said, the vast majority of the graphics come through quite clearly in black and white, but a few are a little dark. I'm sure Robin's first choice would be to publish in color, but that's usually not up to the author!
* It would have been great to have more downloadable files to use alongside the book (I found only one in the 3D Warehouse). The projects are easy enough to do with your own models, but having steps applicable to specific models would be clearer than more general instructions.
Overall, this book will be extremely useful for any architect, landscaper, interior designer, engineer, even student, who needs to show someone around their models. You'll spend a few bucks on the book, but you'd be spending a heck of a lot more than than on licensed rendering and production software, which this book will help you avoid.
Highly recommended!
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great book towards free professional looking images, July 2 2010
By CAD Addict - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Sketchup 7.1 for Architectural Visualization (Paperback)
The book is excellent for those aiming to produce architectural visualizations without willing to spend thousands in software or training lessons. From the very beginning the book states one of its main motivs "if it is not free don't waste your time with it". Following this statement the books shows you how to work smarter using free tools like SketchUp for modeling, Kerkythea for rendering and Gimp for image processing to mention just the most relevant.
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars
First Impressions, Sep 9 2010
By D. Schneider - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Sketchup 7.1 for Architectural Visualization (Paperback)
I just received this book today and I am totally not impressed so far. When selling a book on Computer Visualization in 2010, it is an embarrassment to include fuzzy black and white photos, NO COLOR and no CD with support files, not even a website with support files to download! The .skp files could have been uploaded for free to Google Warehouse, and the book could have included links to them, I've seen that done before. Was the author just lazy? This is ridiculous. It's over priced at $40. VISUALIZATION is in the title, the ENTIRE BOOK IS ABOUT CREATING COLOR IMAGES and NONE ARE INCLUDED IN THE BOOK!?!?!?!