So here I am: My first blog post and my first tutorial. I’m not super confident at filming myself and trying to look natural. That’s why I work behind the scenes. But I wanted to teach my skills to people who might be interested. The video below took a few takes, and I’m pretty pleased with how it turned out, although I could still take some practice. Check it out, and I hope, if you like Adobe After Effects, you find this useful.
I decided to do my first tutorial on the Saber Plugin because I love that Plugin. As you will see from the video, I have used it many times in my professional work.
Here’s a quick quide on how to install it, which I didn’t go through in the video.
Download either the Mac or PC version from https://www.videocopilot.net/blog/2016/03/new-plug-in-saber-now-available-100-free/.
Find the downloaded .dmg file, usually in your Downloads folder.
Double-click the .dmg file to open the installation package.
The installer will prompt you to drag the Saber plugin file into the appropriate directory. Navigate to your Adobe After Effects plugins folder, typically: Applications > Adobe After Effects [Version] > Plug-ins
Drag the Saber plugin file into this folder.
Locate the downloaded file (usually in your Downloads folder) and double-click the installer to begin.
The installer should automatically detect your Adobe After Effects folder. If it doesn’t, manually point it to the correct directory, typically: C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe After Effects [Version]\Support Files\Plug-ins
Follow the on-screen instructions to finish installing the plugin.
So now you’ve installed it, check out my video to start creating some awesome stuff.
This mattered especially in remote workflows that increased reliance on well-formed geometry. Files shared between collaborators, or passed downstream to renderers, engineers, or CNC operators, needed robust topology. The improved Push/Pull helped close the gap between a designer’s intent and the exported reality. The subtle behavioral upgrade also reshaped pedagogy and plugin ecosystems. Instructors found it easier to teach clean modeling practices because the core tool rewarded good intent. Plugin authors leaned into the more reliable base behavior to build utilities that assumed fewer heuristics for error-correction. Modeling habits shifted: designers increasingly used Push/Pull as a primary, dependable modeling act rather than a provisional move that required immediate cleanup. A Human Story: Small Tools, Big Confidence Perhaps the most compelling part of this chronicle is human: the way a nuanced improvement restores confidence. For many users, SketchUp’s joy has always been the immediacy of form-making. When that immediacy no longer meant repeated fixes, it felt like permission to be bolder. Quick massing studies, playful facade adjustments, iterative furniture tweaks — these became lower-friction acts of design again. The tool’s evolution respected users’ muscle memory while honoring their need for precision. Legacy: Incremental Refinement as Design Philosophy SketchUp 2021’s Push/Pull enhancements are a reminder that software progress often happens through considerate refinement rather than grand overhaul. By listening to how designers work at the edges of tools — the small, repetitive gestures — the SketchUp team preserved the program’s ethos (direct, tactile modeling) while making it more robust for real-world production.
In short: Joint-aware Push/Pull didn’t rewrite the rules of 3D modeling. It quietly tightened them, so designers could keep moving fast without leaving a wake of broken geometry behind. For anyone who models in SketchUp, that’s a practical, almost poetic improvement: better joints, cleaner models, and more time spent designing. Joint Push Pull Sketchup 2021
In early 2021, as the architecture and maker communities wrestled with remote collaboration and tighter deadlines, a quiet but profound refinement arrived in SketchUp: improved control and nuance for the Push/Pull tool. What might seem a modest upgrade actually unfolded into a story of workflow liberation — a small, tactile victory for designers who live by geometry. The Problem: Precision vs. Momentum Push/Pull had long been SketchUp’s signature move: the intuitive, physical-feeling gesture that turns a 2D face into 3D form in an instant. But users frequently hit a tension point. Fast ideation demanded momentum — quick extrusions, playful massing, iterative sculpting. Yet real projects required precision: aligned faces, matched joint conditions, and clean geometry for downstream modeling, rendering, and fabrication. The original Push/Pull behavior could produce messy joints and unintentional splits when faces shared edges or when multiple adjacent extrusions interacted. That friction cost time — messy cleanup, hidden edges, and geometry that broke later operations. The Change: Joint-Aware Behavior in SketchUp 2021 SketchUp 2021 introduced more aware Push/Pull behavior that better respected adjacent geometry and edge relationships. Rather than a blunt extrude-or-tear approach, the tool began to consider neighboring faces and shared edges, producing cleaner joints and smarter splits. The result wasn’t a reinvention of modeling metaphors; it was a thoughtful tuning that honored the tool’s tactile simplicity while giving users stronger, more predictable control. This mattered especially in remote workflows that increased