Joint Pushpull -

Several companies have successfully implemented joint push-pull strategies, including:

This feature allows you to extrude a face in a specific direction defined by a line or axis, rather than just the face's normal. This is incredibly useful for architectural details where you need an extrusion to align with a slope or an angle other than the face itself. joint pushpull

Joint PushPull is not just a plugin; it is a workflow upgrade. It unlocks the "organic" side of SketchUp, allowing users to model complex architecture, furniture, and product designs that would otherwise be impossible or incredibly tedious to create. It unlocks the "organic" side of SketchUp, allowing

Beyond basic extrusion, JPP offers advanced control over geometry and workflow: PUSH PULLING Curved Faces in SketchUp? The extension by Fredo6 is widely considered a

For anyone moving past beginner-level SketchUp work, It is robust, reliable, and arguably the best $0 (free/donation) investment you can make for your 3D modeling kit.

The extension by Fredo6 is widely considered a "must-have" tool for SketchUp users. While the native Push/Pull tool is limited to single, flat faces, Joint PushPull (JPP) introduces the ability to extrude multiple faces simultaneously and, most importantly, provides solutions for thickening curved surfaces by maintaining geometric continuity. Key Extrusion Modes

If you use SketchUp professionally, the native "Push/Pull" tool eventually reveals its limitations. It works great for extruding flat, rectangular shapes perpendicular to the face, but the moment you try to extrude a curved surface, a complex organic shape, or a surface that isn't flat on the ground, the native tool fails. This is exactly where steps in and saves the day.