Microsoft Garage's Sketch 360 app lets you create VR scenes with Windows ink

Microsoft Garage's Sketch 360 app lets you create VR scenes with Windows ink

The Microsoft Garage, Microsoft's home for experimental apps from its employees, has produced a number of interesting and useful apps over the years. The latest, called Sketch 360, continues that trend by putting tools to create 360-degree and VR scenes in the hands of designers using nothing more than Windows ink.

Sketch 360 was crafted by Microsoft Creative Experience Engineer Michael Scherotter as a way to lower the barriers for freehand drawing 360-degree scenes. "It's very difficult to freehand draw in 360. You need to draw straight lines curved and you can't see how your creation turns out until you've finished the whole thing," Sherotter says. Sketch 360 attempts to solve these issues by giving designers a quick way to prototype ideas and see them rendered in 360-degree scenes before diving into the hard work of 3D modeling.

Here's a quick rundown of the features included in Sketch 360:

  • Draw 360 Sketches with Windows Ink.
  • Export to JPEG files at various resolutions with 360 metadata that websites like Facebook and Kuula recognize by providing immersive experiences.
  • Export to a full website (HTML,CSS,JS,JPEG) to view the page on your computer or upload to the web.
  • Cut, copy and paste Windows Ink to/from other apps and move ink around the sketch.
  • Pick the background color of your choice and enable a textured background.
  • Sketch in full-screen mode.
  • Display the full sketch and the 360 view in separate windows or displays.
  • Export to various image resolutions

Since it's a Microsoft Garage app, Sketch 360 is still very much an experiment. Still, it looks like it could prove to be an interesting tool for everyone from architects to game designers, who need a quick qay to prototype on the fly.

Sketch 360 is available on the Microsoft Store now for free.

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Dan Thorp-Lancaster

Dan Thorp-Lancaster is the former Editor-in-Chief of Windows Central. He began working with Windows Central, Android Central, and iMore as a news writer in 2014 and is obsessed with tech of all sorts. You can follow Dan on Twitter @DthorpL and Instagram @heyitsdtl