Bob in SF
Member
Some dear friends of similar vintage kindly included me in a recent zoom sing-along (and I'm not and never will be a singer).
We concluded with "What a Wonderful World" by Thiele and Weiss, 1967. Louis Armstrong often ended his sets with this tune.
They requested some music-themed bolo ties to brighten the Holidays, so I obliged.
We had a pre-flight cup of espresso as usual to help clear any lyrics cob webs (looking at printed lyrics is cheating).
We reminisced about the old hand held 3D viewers - a lot different than today's 3D and virtual reality.
I modeled/sculpted and colored the juke box, espresso cup, and the 3D viewer in the incredible (totally free and open source) software called Blender - available here with plenty of tutorials to get you up to speed:
www.blender.org
This software is great for modeling, sculpting, model creation for 3D printing, game asset creation, UV mapping, text handling, 2 and 3D animation, and even video editing - it's the brilliant brain child of Ton Roosendal of Amsterdam - try it! You can code in Python language if so inclined, but no coding is necessary to fully enjoy the software.
I detailed the (real world) bolo-making steps in this earlier post:
My songful buds like the Bolo Ties, so I'm happy.
Warm regards to all - Bob
We concluded with "What a Wonderful World" by Thiele and Weiss, 1967. Louis Armstrong often ended his sets with this tune.
They requested some music-themed bolo ties to brighten the Holidays, so I obliged.
We had a pre-flight cup of espresso as usual to help clear any lyrics cob webs (looking at printed lyrics is cheating).
We reminisced about the old hand held 3D viewers - a lot different than today's 3D and virtual reality.
I modeled/sculpted and colored the juke box, espresso cup, and the 3D viewer in the incredible (totally free and open source) software called Blender - available here with plenty of tutorials to get you up to speed:

blender.org - Home of the Blender project - Free and Open 3D Creation Software
The Freedom to Create

I detailed the (real world) bolo-making steps in this earlier post:
Bolo Ties; Produce Labels, Cityscapes, Fish, Birds, Etc.; inlaid into turned wood settings
I've been hooked on bolo ties since they became popular in the 1950's. These are few that I've made over the last several months - pleasant time painting, drawing and compositing images, and some quick wood turning. This was also a good chance to revitalize some of my earlier watercolor...
www.penturners.org
My songful buds like the Bolo Ties, so I'm happy.
Warm regards to all - Bob