Pull Interactive Free ((new)) - Joint Push

. It overcomes the limitations of SketchUp’s native Push/Pull tool by allowing users to extrude multiple faces simultaneously, including complex curved surfaces. Status and Licensing (Free vs. Paid)

: Offsets faces along their average normal direction to maintain a connected surface. Vector Push Pull : Extrudes faces in a specific user-defined direction. Normal Push Pull

Boundary Selection: The interactive mode allows you to select faces across different components or groups without needing to enter them individually. Note on "Free" Status joint push pull interactive free

Current Model: You can find the latest version, Joint Push Pull Interactive, on SketchUcation.

Multi-Face Extrusion: You can select and extrude multiple faces simultaneously while maintaining their connectivity, which is impossible with native SketchUp tools. Paid) : Offsets faces along their average normal

The Ultimate Guide to Joint Push Pull (Interactive Mode)

What is it?

The native SketchUp Push/Pull tool works great on flat rectangles, but it fails on curved surfaces or faces that aren't rectangular. Joint Push Pull (JPP) solves this by allowing you to extrude surfaces along their normals (their natural direction).

Final Exercise: The Freeform Patchwork

For the last activity, the facilitator handed out square fabric patches. Without planning, each person stitched a small motif and then passed the patch. The receiving person could either add a push — a bold color, a geometric slash — or a pull — a muted stitch, a border that contained the previous mark. When the patches returned full-circle, they were sewn into a quilt. The final piece held a lively cadence of contrasts: bright stitches interrupting quiet ones, seams that both linked and held apart. Note on "Free" Status Current Model: You can

You no longer need a corporate budget to extrude complex fillets.

Extrude Curved Surfaces: Unlike SketchUp’s native Push/Pull tool, this extension allows you to extrude curved or smoothed surfaces by automatically filling in the joints between the individual flat faces that make up the curve.