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Bounce, Tumble, and Splash!: Simulating the Physical World with Blender 3D

Bounce, Tumble, and Splash!: Simulating the Physical World with Blender 3D

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Author: Tony Mullen
Creator: Erwin Coumans
Publisher: Sybex
Category: Book

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $31.49
You Save: $18.50 (37%)



New (27) Used (6) from $24.98

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 141920

Media: Paperback
Edition: Pap/Cdr
Pages: 400
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 7.9 x 0.7

ISBN: 0470192801
Dewey Decimal Number: 006.696
EAN: 9780470192801
ASIN: 0470192801

Publication Date: June 30, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Bounce, Tumble, and Splash!: Simulating the Physical World with Blender 3D

Accessories:

  • Introducing Character Animation with Blender

Similar Items:

  • Introducing Character Animation with Blender
  • The Essential Blender: Guide to 3D Creation with the Open Source Suite Blender
  • Animating with Blender: How to Create Short Animations from Start to Finish
  • Blender 3D Architecture, Buildings, and Scenery: Create photorealistic 3D architectural visualizations of buildings, interiors, and environmental scenery
  • The Artist's Guide to GIMP Effects: Creative Techniques for Photographers, Artists, and Designers

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Learn all about Blender, the premier open-source 3D software, in Bounce, Tumble, and Splash!: Simulating the Physical World with Blender 3D. You will find step-by-step instructions for using Blender’s complex features and full-color visual examples with detailed descriptions of the processes. If you’re an advanced Blender user, you will appreciate the sophisticated coverage of Blender’s fluid simulation system, a review Blender’s latest features, and a guide to the Bullet physics engine, which handles a variety of physics simulations such as rigid body dynamics and rag doll physics.


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars You need this book. Definitely.   July 18, 2008
Renato Perini (Italy)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

I ordered this book without much hesitation, once I discovered Tony was writing it. Having read his past book "Introducing Character Animation with Blender", I ordered this one without thinking twice. Now that this book is in my hands, I can't regret for my choice. The overall quality of the publication is impressive. Not only for the contents but also for the technical production: fine paper with color quality images. It's not common these days. The book is composed of 400 pages (7 chapters) plus an appendix and they are:

Chapter 1 - Re-creating the World: An overview
This chapter describes those tools and techniques that are not well explained elsewhere by the Blender literature. It covers topics like material creation with nodes, transparency, subsurface scattering, sky maps (sphere maps and angular maps) and those tools that can be used to fake physics, when accurate simulations are not necessary at all but you still need a "quick and dirty" method to achieve an effect efficiently and with sufficient speed (an example: water simulation with surface tension displacement or cloth simulation using a displacement modifier). Obviously, these techniques are useful for everyone involved using Blender. No doubt. Much appreciated.

Chapter 2 - The Nitty-Gritty on particles.
The first thing I thought after reading this chapter was:"WOW". *ALL* the latest development on Blender particles is covered here: emitters, reactors, positioning particles on a grid, chained physics systems, various types of visualizations, force fields (harmonic, magnetic, vortex, spherical, wind, etc.)
You will be guided through the creation of a convincing fire material using clouds and stencils textures! All is explained gradually and with great style. Highly informative.

Chapter 3 - Getting flexible with Soft Bodies and Cloth.
As you can expect, all that has been developed is covered here: baking, how to animate a spring, force fields and collision, using curves with softbodies (it will teach you how to animate a chain using an empty), stress maps, how to produce a fantastic cube of gelatin using lattices, simulating clothes. It will even explain how to use the demolition plugin to produce a window breaking in a spiderweb pattern!

Chapter 4 - Hair Essentials: The Long and Short of Strand Particles.
How to produce hair, fur and grass. After covering the basics, this chapter will guide you through the creation of an hairstyle on top of a practice head. One of my preferred chapters.

Chapter 5 - Making a Splash with Fluids.
One of the most interesting part of Blender: the fluid simulator. All is covered here: domains, resolution, inflow, outflow, fluid object intersection, kinematic viscosity, obstacles (considering animation, of course).

Chapter 6 - Bullet Physics and the Blender Game Engine.
One of the less undestood parts of Blender is certainly the game engine. So I was favourably impressed when I have seen an entire chapter dedicated to it. This chapter describes all the tools needed to produce hard bodies simulations, using the game engine and the powerfullness of the Bullet Physics Library. Actors, actuators, IPO curves, rigid body simulations with IPO curves, joints, ragdolls ... This is material that will be probably new to most Blender users.

Chapter 7 - Imitation of Life: Simulating Trees and Plants.
This chapter explores a few tools that can be used for creating trees and vegetation in general, like the L-System, ngPlant and Ivy Generator.

Each chapter is independent, so you don't need to read the book from the first page, with the exception of chapter 4, who strongly depends by the two previous chapters. This book is of course not intended for beginners. This book is completely updated with the latest Blender development and it covers the actual stable release. This is the documentation Blender needs. I highly recommend this book. It is well written, well presented, well structured and, most importantly, it's definitely fun!



5 out of 5 stars Not For Beginners, But Definitely a Buy!   July 7, 2008
Christopher J. Anton
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

I purchased this hoping to learn to use Blender, and open-source program available from blender.org. The book is very well written, very informative, and an excellent reference, but definitely NOT for beginners; the author even says so. If you, like me, are a beginner, either buy this AFTER getting "Character Animation With Blender" or "The Essential Blender," buy it WITH one of those, but if you are serious about learning 3D imaging, animated or not, this is a definitive must for your library.


5 out of 5 stars Great book!   June 26, 2008
Nickle
2 out of 5 found this review helpful

I recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn and/or master physics in Blender 2.46. This book has great tutorials. Unlike Tony Mullen's other book Introduction to Character Animation you are not working on one project, you work on lots a bit like the Essential blender. There are pictures to help you on every page and there ar .blend files on the CD.


5 out of 5 stars Particles, Soft Bodies, and Hair!   July 3, 2008
John R. Nyquist (Colorado)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I must say, I'm biased... I started liking this book the first time I read the title! The book is very impressive, it is full-color, lots of images, and the chapters are nice and modular so you can jump to the section the topic you're interested in. Tony Mullen did a great job in making the complex straightforward. The tasks in the chapters are clearly written in step-by-step style. He gets right to the point of the chapter and has you work through the material. Another nice touch is seeing pics and blurbs on various Blender artists/developers.


5 out of 5 stars The one-stop guide to all of the Blender's physical reality   October 28, 2008
H. Yamasaki
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a great book. The quality of the print, color illustrations (although they sometimes don't do justice to the original RGB artwork), the bundled DVD with examples and scripts... everything is top-notch.

The text is easy to understand, and illustrations give you a very clear picture of what you need to do, and where. It covers all (and I really mean all) aspects of physics simulation: materials, shaders, hair, soft bodies, cloth, water... everything. It presents everything in a well systematized way, so you can't get lost.

The only thing that bothered my a little, is that author makes references to previous chapters, so if you're jumping around the book, you may find you need to read a few chapters more than you thought you'd need. But that's okay, because anything you read in this book is good learning material.

For an aspiring Blender newbie, this book is, probably, the quickest way of getting up to speed, and even getting the hang of some pretty advanced stuff.


3d animation  3d modelling  blender  dynamics  physics  

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