How to Make a Beer in Blender


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Blender tutorial showing you how to make a beer from start to finish, using Blender. View the post: http://www.blenderguru.com/videos/how-to-make-a-beer/

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36 responses to “How to Make a Beer in Blender”

  1. So, just wondering; could we use volume-absorption for that emitting light bulb (in the previous tutorial)
    Surely glass has similar refraction qualities to liquid… or does Blender not work that-way?

  2. How do I grab the inside bottom of the glass bottom only? (8 minutes in) I've been stuck at this part for a while now 🙁 looks like he just box selects and as if by magic only selects the inside of the glass lol

    PS below has been suggest to try ctrl + L or ctrl + 1? I've tried both and definitely not the answer! … could really use a beer myself right about now folks, please help a girl out!

  3. Andrew, love you work as you are great at attention to detail. However your speculation as to what we as viewers "may be thinking about or may say as you work often comes off as you think we are all dumb asses. This is not the case, and it could be both distracting and possibly offensive. Best to stick to what you know and are here to teach. thanks for all you wonderful information.

  4. These are great tutorials to learn your way around Blender. Taken me about 3 days to follow this all the way through, as it's hard to keep track at some points but love doing them and very well explained 👍🏼

  5. Hi Blender Guru: a quick response to your bubble question. In beer a lot of gas (mostly CO2 and air) is soluted. However due to the apolair nature of gases, i.e. they do not like to mix with water just like oil. Whenever there are apolair particles (tiny microscopic impuritites like dust particles for example) these molecules adhere to the particles. Bubbles are formed whenever enough gas molecules stick together. If the particles are big enough you can actually see this with the naked eye: just boil an egg for example, you'll see bubbles forming on the egg. The impurities in beer are not visible to the naked eye and the float around via a random pattern (a.k.a. Brownian motion (sounds familiar?)). That's why these streams of bubbles seam to spawn at random locations in the beverage.

  6. Bubbles appear where there are imperfections or dirt in a glass. If you ever see a champagne glass where bubbles are pouring out of one small spot on the bottom, it's likely because the glass wasn't cleaned thoroughly, and there's a piece of dirt where the bubbles are coming from. Fun fact – high quality beer glasses will have patterns laser-etched on the bottom of the glass to tightly control where the bubbles come from for optimal aesthetics.

  7. That's why u are a great teacher Andrew 😮 it's in your DNA you brightened my days thx u man! if I had someone like u in high school I would be PHD in somthing lol I dont know what but somthing like I m gonna be PHD In Blender because of you x)

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