PODIUM BROWSER

THOUSANDS OF RENDER READY MODELS AND MATERIALS FOR SKETCHUP

Find the furniture, lights, appliances, decorations, plants, and materials you need to quickly bring you SketchUp models to life."

To see a large sample of Podium Browser, click here

Ecco2k E Font -

Podium Browser is a premium component library containing over 45,000 high-quality models and   materials, with hundreds added each month.  All models from 3D trees to furniture are render ready for SU Podium and PodiumxRT but also are highly suitable to stand alone SketchUp exterior and interior designs.    

Render Ready

Items in Podium Browser are already configured to be rendered with SU Podium or just use with SketchUp.

    •   Thousands of manufacturer specfic light fixtures, cars, decoration items.
    •   High quality textures for materials.
    •   2D and 3D trees, plants, interior plants, all types of manufacturer specific furniture and appliances.

Podium Browser works just like the 3D Warehouse — Simply click on a thumbnail in the Browser to download the content into your SketchUp model.  You can then render using SU Podium, ProWalker or Podium Walker if desired.      Podium Browser components and materials are developed with considerable detail and suited well for SketchUp designs. 

Case Studies

These four scenes were created almost entirely with Podium Browser components and rendered with SU Podium. Click through the images to see a breakdown of the Podium Browser components used in each image:

ecco2k e font
ecco2k e font

Ecco2k E Font -

I’ve tried to write my name since then. But every time I get to the second letter, my pen hovers. Because I can’t remember if I’m supposed to exist inside the curve—or fall forever through the hole in the middle.

The was everywhere. It was the shape of a drain grate. It was the curve of a girl’s collarbone. It was the negative space between two falling raindrops. A voice, not quite human—pitched like a vocoder fed through a broken heart—whispered:

The collector, a rail-thin man named Dario who dressed like a cursed web designer, didn’t look up. He was polishing a silver ring that looked like melted metal. “People collect letters,” he whispered. “Usually ‘A’ or ‘Z.’ Begin or end. But you want the one.”

The collector’s apartment was a mausoleum of forgotten beauty. Shelves of obsolete VHS tapes, cracked iPhone 4 screens, and a single, pristine pair of translucent blue sunglasses sat under dust. But I wasn't there for any of that. ecco2k e font

“Touch it,” Dario said.

I reached out a finger. The moment my skin met the cold CRT glass, the world fractured .

Here’s a short, atmospheric story inspired by and the cryptic, almost alien minimalism of his e logo / font. The Memory Thief and the Sans-Serif E I’ve tried to write my name since then

“You don’t use the letter. You live inside its missing piece.”

But not any e. This was the . It was sans-serif, almost inhumanly geometric. The counter—that little enclosed hole in the lowercase ‘e’—was perfectly circular, like a black sun. The arm of the ‘e’ didn’t curl playfully; it jutted forward, sharp as a scalpel. It looked less like a letter and more like a symbol for a religion that hasn’t been invented yet.

I was no longer in the apartment. I was walking through a drained shopping mall in Stockholm at 3 a.m. The floors were wet, but there was no ceiling—just a pale, chemical sky. My reflection in the tiles didn't match my movements. It smiled a second before I did. The was everywhere

I looked down. My own chest had a hole in it. Perfectly circular. The same size as the counter of the .

He led me to a back room. On a black monitor from 2007, glowing at 3% brightness, was a single glyph: .

When I woke, Dario was gone. The monitor was cracked. And on the back of my right hand, in a thin, silver scar, was a single lowercase .