Doing so makes for clean continuity, and precise layout/positioning of images across multi page documents. It’s easier to just make copies of page layouts you’ve already created, and then go back through those and change the scene around in the various models you’ve placed on the page. Also adding meaningful descriptive names to your scenes makes it easier to work with them from within Layout.Īlternatively, if your looking to switch between the various scenes you’ve created in SketchUp within Layout… That can happen by ‘Right Clicking’ upon an inserted model and selecting the Scenes submenu from the context menu which appear after you’ve done the right click action.Ĭhanging scenes in this manner is nice since it also means that you can bypass some of the page layout work of having to insert SU models onto blank pages. and that has some benefit in organizing your layout work. what’s not so immediately apparent is that you can also setup a different style for each scene that you create. If it’s to do with creating them within SketchUp, via the >View >Animations… ‘Add Scene’ option. I’m happy to take a peek and comment, but I’m not sure what you have in mind regarding the nature of the question. Not all of the styles will be visible, you need to click on the home icon, to access the full range of options.Īdding one more topic re: scenes. To view the ‘SketchUp Model’ window in layout, turn it on at… >Windows >SketchUp Model… then make sure that the style tab is selected (not the view tab), and tryout the available options by clicking on one of the style preview icons. Or even just uncheck the ‘background’ box while still keeping your existing style. I’d take the option of doing this within layout, and that can happen by selecting your models viewport window, and then going into the ‘SketchUp Model – Style’ settings and choosing a different style option. The two go together very well, and you just need to go and assign a different style to your models viewport window in layout (as one option), or change the style in sketchup (as another option)… to fix your problem here. With Styles however, you’re getting into all kinds of design options for background/foreground colors, line weights, and simulated textures, among other things. In setting up ‘Scenes’ you’re primarily concerned with choosing a view point for looking at your model on some form of 2D media. This is pretty much an issue with Styles.
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