![]() Let’s start by selecting our entire cube. This is useful, but it can also deform your shape, so you have to be careful. ![]() You can select any of the individual faces on your cube and scale them without scaling your entire cube. However, with a 3D object, this isn’t the case anymore. When we were working with two dimensional shapes, it didn’t really matter how you selected your object because you were only dealing with a single face. ![]() I want to start off by talking about how you select your object when working with 3D shapes. Once you’ve done that, you should have a shape like the following image below. You can draw the box using the rectangle tool, and then use the push-pull tool to extrude it into a 3d shape. Let’s start off by drawing a box, then extruding it into a cube. Look up at the top of your screen for a little icon that looks like a brown box inside a red box with a red arrow coming out of the corner. First, let’s take a second and review where the scale tool is located. In this tutorial, I want to talk a little bit about using the scale tool to work with three dimensional objects. In my last tutorial, I talked about using the scale tool in SketchUp to modify your two dimensional shapes by resizing, reshaping, or mirroring your shapes. Modifying 3D Shapes in SketchUp Using the Scale Tool ![]()
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