Peruvian Vessel (Mar 22)
Written by Ryan Olson   
Saturday, 15 March 2008

Ancient Peruvian Stirrup-Spout Vessel

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This is a typical ceramic vessel from the Andes region of South America, ca. 12th-5th century BC. The handle/spout design is called a "stirrup spout" due to its similarity to a horseback rider's stirrups. This model provides yet more opportunity to practice revolves and sweeps. This particular piece is part of the collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. You can see a picture of it here. For this exercise we're only interested in the basic shape, not the surface details.

Since the vessel is hollow with an opening at the top, the best approach will be to model the whole thing as a single solid body and then use the Shell feature to hollow it out. I used a wall thickness of 3mm, which seemed to work well. On the Shell feature screen, you can select the top face under "Faces to Remove" to keep the top open. Alternatively, you can use Extruded Cut or Revolved Cut to make an opening after the Shell. Note that the entire interior of the vessel should be connected, such that liquid in the bottom can be poured out the top opening; see the section view in the images above.

I'm not providing any drawings for this one, just an eDrawings file. I highly recommend saving the image on the website above and using it as a Sketch Picture guide for the Front plane of your model. The artifact is approximately 8.5 inches high, so scale the picture accordingly.

Finally, when modeling this myself based on the website picture, I realized that the stirrup (loop) part of the handle/spout most likely has an oval (elliptical) profile, rather than circular. If you try it with a circular profile, you'll probably find that the top spout is too big to fit on the handle part. You can see what I mean in the eDrawings file. 

Two of the video tutorials cover the Shell feature, and may be helpful when working on this model.

Due: March 22 

Note: This assignment will also be due on iLearn by Sat, April 5. Upload your SolidWorks Part (.SLDPRT) file.

Last Updated ( Saturday, 22 March 2008 )