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Retro rocketship
Retro rocketship








Mostly likely, you’ll want either an artistic, illustrative style or a photorealistic style. Then add styles until it’s closer to what you’ve imagined. Keep things simple in the beginning, just describe what you want to see. So these prompts will help you get what you want faster, but they’re just a starting point for you to develop “ethical” Midjourney prompts that are more unique. Note: it’s dodgy, but not illegal, to copy an artist’s style directly by using their name (for living artists at least) but you could also just paste in 2 pieces of artwork and reproduce something much closer to their originals. I’ll go through soon and make examples of some of these so you can see the differences, but here’s a handy reference guide. What are the best text-to-image prompt keywords for unique types of art and photographic styles? For best AI art results? How about architecture, fantasy art, character renders and logo design? I’ve been playing with Midjourney and other text to image generators built around stable diffusion and I have my own prompts to get the best quality images, but recently I let chatGPT3 help me brainstorm some new ones… so here’s a huge list! Scroll all the way down for new prompts, V5 examples and best midjourney prompts for stunning results. In my second design I avoided using splines altogether, so the workflow to svg is much more straightforward.įusion360 is well worth your investment of effort though, it’s a very powerful modeling tool.Update! Version 5 just came out, and it’s more photographic and less artistic. I had an exported picture of the rib which I imported into Inkscape so I could trace over it in there. Fortunately though the slots and other straight lines do export, so I just fill in the gaps using Inkscape, being sure to keep the slots exactly the same size and in exactly the same relation to each other. Unfortunately, splines in Fusion (which I used to generate the shape of the rib) can’t be imported to Inkscape. I have to export the rib and bulkhead sketches generated by the last four steps as DXF files, then import those into Inkscape for layout. I’ll warn you though, I’m still learning Fusion, and the workflow for getting that design into the forge isn’t really optimal. Fusion360’s parametric nature is very useful for this sort of thing.

retro rocketship

Also note how I incorporated the laser kerf into the slot width calculation. The design contains a parameter (modify -> Change Parameters) named “material_thickness” which will adjust the slots for a different source material width.

RETRO ROCKETSHIP DOWNLOAD

It looks like there’s an option to download a version for Fusion360 (upper right corner), which hopefully will let you load it and look around. Next challenge, leave an opening in the side for a door. You could take those svg files and remove the interior circles from the bulkheads so they become shelves for passengers. That kind of variability in “eighth inch material” is super annoying.Ī hatchimals rocket sounds like a neat idea. I made a version for some supposedly eighth inch plywood I get at a local craft store, but unfortunately that was about 0.1175 in width, not really near proofgrade dimensions at all. That version is slotted for 0.15 material, and I get a decent friction fit with cardboard, but yes eighth inch material would be kind of loose fitting.








Retro rocketship