Book Image

Blender 3D Incredible Machines

By : Christopher Kuhn, Allan Brito
Book Image

Blender 3D Incredible Machines

By: Christopher Kuhn, Allan Brito

Overview of this book

Blender 3D is one of the top pieces of 3D animation software. Machine modeling is an essential aspect of war games, space games, racing games, and animated action films. As the Blender software grows more powerful and popular, there is a demand to take your modeling skills to the next level. This book will cover all the topics you need to create professional models and renders. This book will help you develop a comprehensive skill set that covers the key aspects of mechanical modeling. Through this book, you will create many types of projects, including a pistol, spacecraft, robot, and a racer. We start by making a Sci-fi pistol, creating its basic shape and adding details to it. Moving on, you’ll discover modeling techniques for larger objects such as a space craft and take a look at how different techniques are required for freestyle modeling. After this, we’ll create the basic shapes for the robot and combine the meshes to create unified objects. We'll assign materials and explore the various options for freestyle rendering. We’ll discuss techniques to build low-poly models, create a low-poly racer, and explain how they differ from the high poly models we created previously. By the end of this book, you will have mastered a workflow that you will be able to apply to your own creations.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Blender 3D Incredible Machines
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Sci-Fi Pistol - Creating the Basic Shapes

Shaping the body


For our next project, we're going to build a futuristic shuttlecraft. The ship is fairly complex, but becomes easier when you break it down into distinct subsections. In this chapter, we'll work on getting the major shapes and components blocked out. It will start to look a lot less daunting by the time we're done!

First, let's take a look at our design:

If this looks familiar, that's because it was one of my first major Blender projects. I released it under the Creative Commons Non-Attribution license, which means anyone can use the model (or the design) for whatever they want.

We don't need to replicate this ship exactly, but we'll use it as a guide. I've made several versions over the years, and no two are exactly alike. We'll just think of it as concept art.

From the image, we can identify several key components and details that we'll want to pay attention to:

The first thing to focus on is the basic shape of the hull. You can see that the top and bottom sections are...