I'm a San Francisco industrial designer, graphic designer, and illustrator with over ten years experience. This is my personal blog, and will include sketches, products in the works, etc. My interests cover a diverse range which includes children's products, outdoor sporting equipment, furniture, electronics, housewares, soft goods, and even ceramics.
Showing posts with label Rhino v5. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rhino v5. Show all posts
Monday, October 13, 2014
Thursday, October 9, 2014
Rendering materials...
Misfit Shine comes in an amazing array of colors, so I thought I'd look at rendering a few to see how they'd come out. The Shine unit is modeled in Rhino, from the one I own, and rendered in VRay. The green was the hardest of the colors to match, and I still think it needs a little tweaking. Post process in Photoshop.
Labels:
industrial design,
photoshop,
rendering,
Rhino v5,
VRay
Airport Express iCloud
I thought of this idea a while back as I was using time machine, and how I'd like to have my data backed up an extra time to the cloud, but not while I was using the network. I'd like to have a setting that would backup to the cloud at night while I was a sleep for example. Modeled in Rhino, rendered in VRay.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Can you identify them...
Took inspiration from a pair that I always end up using. I left the logo off. Think you know where you'd see these particular pair?
Modeled in Rhino v5 and rendered in Autodesk Showcase.
Modeled in Rhino v5 and rendered in Autodesk Showcase.
Labels:
autodesk showcase,
Headphones,
industrial design,
Rhino v5
Sunday, November 13, 2011
My own headphones...
Took what I learned from that great tutorial and made my own pair. Oh, there a few design problems, but I'll take care of those in the next version. These were made using Rhino v5, and rendered in Showcase. As soon as I can pick up a copy of KeyShot, I'll post another render.
Labels:
CAD,
Headphones,
industrial design,
Rhino,
Rhino v5
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Headphone render...
Great tutorial on creating a set of headphones in Rhino v5. Check it out here: http://tips.rhino3d.com/. These were then rendered in Autodesk Showcase. I also tried out KeyShot, but since it's only a demo version, it put a pesky watermark on the final render. Looked really good, though.
Cheers!
Cheers!
Labels:
autodesk showcase,
CAD,
Headphones,
industrial design,
Rhino,
Rhino v5
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