 Alright, let's talk about how I made this egg here. So as you saw from the little video, we have it in two sections and it's threaded. So the cool thing is you can 3D print this and then put some candy or a little figurine or toy in here and give them away and kids will love them. So there are some techniques here that I think are really useful and I'd like to show you them. What I'm going to do here is instead of doing the full like long step by step approach, I'm going to just highlight a few techniques here that I used and I think you'll find very useful. And then for the full tutorial, if you want to watch this step by step approach to creating the egg and the threads, I'm going to make that available to my Patreon subscribers along with the Fusion 360 file for this design that you can download. You can find the link to my Patreon page below. And as a Patreon subscriber, you'll also have access to my full tutorials for a bunch of my other projects. Alright, so let's begin a new design here. And the first part I want to talk about is just the approach of creating that egg shape. You may be tempted to, let's say come in with a line first, straight up, we'll do a 70 millimeter line there. Just sounds about the right size for an egg. And then you'll want to grab your spline tool and I think most of you will probably try to do something like this, like, okay, I'm just going to spline an egg here. You know, and then let's click that check mark. And then now you've got all these points and you're going to maybe try to adjust them to give you an egg shape, right? And that can be a bit tedious. It can be harder to try to get the shape down. I'm going to show you an easier way. So let's just delete that. We're still going to grab our spline tool, but we're just going to make two points. We'll go one at the bottom, one at the top, check. Take these spline handles, the two. So remember with the spline tool, less is always more. I'm just going to make both of these horizontal by using my horizontal constraint here, one and the bottom one here. And now all I have to do is just drag these to get my egg shape. So just these two here. And in fact, you could even dimension these. So let's make, for example, the top, I'm going to make that eight. And in the bottom, I'll make this, let's go with 18. And there we have it, just an egg in two spline points. And now I can just simply hit finish sketch, create, revolve, boom, I have my egg. Okay, now to add the threads. I think another way most people will tackle this is to then go ahead and say, okay, maybe split this in half and then create a sketch and then maybe extrude it up and then do the same, you know, the opposite with the top and then add threads. A lot of times when you have a design that can be revolved, you can do a lot of those feature within that first sketch. So let me delete that revolve tool, go back to that sketch. And the approach I took here is a lot more straightforward. So I'll make a rectangle, make this five by 20. And I'm just going to use a midpoint constraint to put this right in the middle here. And let's draw a line going across, which allows me to separate the bottom profile here from the top here. So I can do one revolve with this, another revolve with the top. So, all right, so basically what I'll do there is just do a create, revolve, and then select these two here. I've got my bottom and then I'm going to repeat the top. And then I'm just going to make sure to make that a new body. And there we have it. So I've got a top portion there and a bottom portion here. All right, just to fast forward a bit, I went ahead and extruded the bottom there to give me a little container in the bottom and then shelled the top to give me the hollow egg there. And now what I'm going to do is just quickly show you the threads part. So if you've never added threads in Fusion 360, it's really, really great tool here because it does everything for you. Create, thread, I'm going to select this profile here. You want to make sure that you have model checked. I'm going with a 40 millimeter size thread here and that designation is 40 by 3, click OK. And I'm going to do the same thing with that top. Just right click, repeat thread, boom, one click, I have a threaded egg. And the beautiful thing with this is, check this out, if I do a section analysis here, you can see if I zoom in here that it's got a built in clearance there. So you don't have to worry about adding an offset there. So there's actually space in between here that allows the thread to work perfectly. Actually, it simply printed this out and it worked great. I didn't have to come back in and add an offset here to give me that extra clearance. It's automatically built in and just after threading it a few times, it actually worked quite smooth. So, okay, that's the quick rundown of how I approached the egg. So just a few things I wanted to highlight here, recap, spline tool, less is more. You can actually create this egg shape with just two spline points instead of trying to create a bunch of different points there. And whenever you have an object that you're going to revolve, consider making all your features right in that sketch and create that revolve instead of going through multiple steps to build it up. And finally, threads. Threads are just beautiful with Fusion 360. It makes it so simple. And the ability to go ahead and just create this and then print it and have it work right away is just amazing. All right, keeping this one short and sweet, guys. But like I said, if you want to see the full step-by-step tutorial, I got a much longer video showing each step and each tool that I used here. And I throw in some extra tips as well. So if you want to take a look at that, check out my Patreon link. Actually, since Easter is this weekend, I'm going to post another video tomorrow showing you how I did the text here. Because if you know anything with the emboss tool, you can't emboss on a complex surface like this. But I'll show you some neat tricks that I used to be able to get this text to emboss on the surface here. So make sure to come back for that one. All right, I'll see you in a bit.