Sketchfab Models

One even got hired by Tesla and commissioned to 3D scan all new Tesla models. The site has over four million 3D assets, the announcement says, while Sketchfab’s website says it has more then.


Sketchfab provides a simple way for anyone to publish and share their 3D models online. To celebrate the best in real-time 3D art, we asked the Sketchfab team to pick the 10 greatest models on the site this month.

To interact with a model in 3D, click the large Play icon in the centre of the frame.
To find out more about a model, click the small Sketchfab logo on the bottom left of the frame.

Sketchfab Fnaf Models

  • Import a model from Sketchfab. Once logged in, you should be able to easily import any downloadable model from Sketchfab. To do so, just run a search query and adapt the search options in the Filters menu. Note that PRO users can use the My Models checkbox to import any published model from their own library (even the private ones).
  • It's easy to upload your 3D models from Blockbench directly to Sketchfab with all textures, animations and settings intact.More about Sketchfab exporters: ht.
  • As for texture information, we're thinking about ways to implement this and other model inspector tools. Until then, you can just add texture information to the model description. I'm a bit confused that you 'had no answer' if you created and uploaded the textures? Taking a quick look at your models, it seems you're using mostly 2k textures.
  • My model doesn't look good, it's different from Sketchfab There are still improvements to do on import, and Sketchfab to Blender (through glTF) conversion has some limits. This section will give some hints about differences or issues that can be encountered when importing models into Blender.


Travelling Cat by Emily Harrison
34.1k triangles (after conversion)


How To Download Sketchfab Models

ChallengerCartoon by Dawid Żybura
18.3k triangles (after conversion)


Poison by Luis Servin
10.6k triangles (after conversion)

Based on a concept by Valentina Remenar.


Dolmen of Vinyes-Mortes – Catalonia by Raiz
65.0k triangles

Smartphone photogrammetry of one of around 20 dolmens in Serra Rodes, Girona, Spain.


Halloween! by Hon Kar Mun (LeafChan)
53.4k triangles (after conversion), animated


Realistic Baleen Whale by AVINAS
7.2 k triangles (after conversion)

Sketchfab Models Free Download


Grand Space Opera: Light Age – Big Buggus by Régis Goossens
55.0k triangles (after conversion)

Based on a concept by Xu J.


Sarai for LeoMinimus – Oculus Quill Commission by Zoe Roellin
107.3k triangles (after conversion)


Fiat 500 x Outlaw by Subin K
424.9k triangles (after conversion)


Johannes Helgeson’s Mangy Dog – CDC Heavy Metal by Lorenzo de Vries
54.7k triangles (after conversion)

Based on a concept by Johannes Helgeson.

SketchfabSketchfab Models


Want to vote for a model of the month? Just Like your favourites on the Sketchfab site, or upload your own!

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Tags: best real-time models, car, character, commercial use, Creative Commons licence, creature, download, FBX, Fiat, Fiat 500, free, game prop, glTF, May 2021, models of the month, real time, Sketchfab, USDZ, whale

During the first manned lunar landing mission in July 1969, Apollo 11’s crew lived in a command module dubbed the Columbia. Currently a priceless artifact in the National Air and Space Museum’s collections, the module was the only portion of the spacecraft to return to Earth. Now, thanks to a new open access initiative spearheaded by Sketchfab, the web’s largest platform for immersive 3-D content, anyone with an internet connection can “re-use, re-imagine and remix” the vessel—as well as nearly 1,700 other historic artifacts—without limitation.

Last week, Sketchfab announced plans to allow organizations to waive all copyright and dedicate their digital models to the public domain. To mark this milestone in museum digitization and accessibility efforts, the 3-D portal has released a new virtual collection of 1,700 models available for the public to download, print or manipulate however they see fit.

“With the introduction of the CC dedication for cultural heritage content, Sketchfab continues to foster ongoing artistic and academic reuse of [3-D] data under clear and easily understandable terms,” says Sketchfab founder and CEO Alban Denoyel in a statement quoted by Forbes. “With thousands of museums, libraries, art galleries, and archaeological projects already using Sketchfab to share their [3-D] data online, the platform wants to make it easy for organizations to align their digital [3-D] collections with their open access policies.”

Apollo 11 Command Module (Combined) by The Smithsonian Institution on Sketchfab

Ranging from historic artifacts to fossils and works of art, the items featured in the collection have entered the public domain through a collaboration between Sketchfab, Creative Commons and 27 cultural organizations from 13 different countries, according to a blog post. Participating organizations include the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the National Gallery of Denmark, Spain’s Museus de Sitges and the Scottish Maritime Museum.

Among the objects released into the public domain is the Abraham Lincoln Mills life mask. The original mask, gifted to the Smithsonian Institution in 1889, was made by applying wet plaster to the president’s face and beard, reports Smithsonian magazine’s Meilan Solly.

Another selection from the collection is a scanned digital model of a ladybug, or Tytthaspis sedecimpunctata, housed at the Digital Archive of Natural History in Germany. As part of efforts to archive the planet’s biodiversity, the organization has developed a new digitization device that generates authentic textured and colored insect scans. Users can also browse a Tyrannosaurus rex skull from the Digital Atlas of Ancient Life; a Peacock table lamp from the Cleveland Museum of Art; and Kneeling Figure, a fourth century B.C. sculpture from the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

“We are especially happy to welcome the Smithsonian Institution to Sketchfab as part of this initiative,” reads Sketchfab’s announcement. “The Smithsonian has uploaded their first official [3-D] models to Sketchfab as part of their newly launched open access program.”

Popular 3d models sketchfab models

For the first time in the organization’s history, the Smithsonian has released a collection of 2.8 million images—featuring materials from 19 museums, nine research centers, libraries, archives and the National Zoo—into the public domain. Among this collection are 3-D models from the Institution’s extensive holdings, giving history, science and art enthusiasts an opportunity to recreate and hold their very own versions of rare objects.

“Being a relevant source for people who are learning around the world is key to our mission,” says Effie Kapsalis, the Smithsonian’s senior digital program officer, to Smithsonian magazine’s Katherine J. Wu. “We can’t imagine what people are going to do with the collections. We’re prepared to be surprised.”

Sketchfab Selling Models

With the array of 3-D models now available for public use, designers can easily incorporate historic artifacts into their projects and creative endeavors, writes Antonio Pacheco for Archinect. As long as users follow designated guidelines, they can download the files and freely transform them into new works of art. (Sketchfab outlines several starting ideas, including using a 3-D model in a school project, printing a high-resolution render on a T-shirt and 3-D printing your very own mini museum.)

Sketchfab Models With Annotations

According to Sketchfab, the new collection is simply the first wave of models released to the public. More will be added to the digital platform as the program continues to evolve.