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    Newbie: Furniture project SU best practices?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • F Offline
      fossa
      last edited by

      Dave R, would you mind posting one of your skp files as an example? That would probably be the quickest way of actually seeing how you set your files up. Maybe post some pics of your projects, that would be cool too.

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      • J Offline
        Jim
        last edited by

        I'm not sure why Dave didn't mention it, but he and Tim Killen have written some excellent articles and videos about SketchUp work-flow and furniture.

        In particular, these 2 videos I thought were pretty good:

        favicon

        (www.finewoodworking.com)

        favicon

        (www.finewoodworking.com)

        Hi

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        • F Offline
          fossa
          last edited by

          I had no idea that Dave R was the Dave R of finewoodworking. Boy do I feel like a fool. 😳

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          • J Offline
            Jim
            last edited by

            Yeah, his picture makes him look young.

            Hi

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            • F Offline
              fossa
              last edited by

              My pic makes my ears and nose look big. I reality they are much smaller.

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              • D Offline
                Dadoing
                last edited by

                @martinrinehart said:

                I struggled up it and then wrote a tutorial so the next person wouldn't have a struggle.
                http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial/index.html
                In the future I'll be adding a "send-me-money" feature, but that's not happened yet.

                Awewsome - thank you. I bookmarked it and plan to work through it carefully.

                Problem with Sketchup is it's more fun than cleaning up sawdust and sharpening tools.

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                • Dave RD Offline
                  Dave R
                  last edited by

                  Jim, thanks for the nice words and the links.

                  Fossa, nearly all of my models these days are done for others so I can't post them. You can see the results of some of the drawings I've done by downloading the plans I've done on Fine Woodworking's site. Here are a few I've done:

                  []Arts and Crafts Display Case](http://store.taunton.com/onlinestore/item/arts-and-crafts-display-case-065120.html), Two Shaker Tables, Garrett Hack's Workbench, John White's New-Fangled Bench. there are others as well. You can also take a look at the cover articles for Issues #209 (Tools and Shops), 210 and 211.

                  I suppose I should update my avatar picture, huh? πŸ˜‰ By the way, I like your ears, there, Fossa.

                  Etaoin Shrdlu

                  %

                  (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                  G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                  M30

                  %

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                  • F Offline
                    fossa
                    last edited by

                    @dadoing said:

                    I've been struggling up the initial learning curve with Sketchup. I've decided to bear down and learn SU properly by drawing an endtable plan.

                    What is the best way to organize the Sketchup file for the main components of the endtable? Scenes? Layers? That's the part I can't seem to grasp. It makes sense to me to draw the six faces of the endtable in six different sub-places of the SU file, rather than all in one 3D image space. Would that be six scenes? Each face of course has different cabinet sub-components, too. Any pointers to get me learning in the right direction?

                    Sorry for hijacking the thread, back to your problem.

                    Some really great learning resources for the basics of sketchup are:

                    1. the guys over at Go-2-School have tons of beginning sketchup vids and
                    2. Googles youtube channel devoted to sketchup

                    Those 2 sources are where I got my sketchup start (and of course the SCF community)

                    for furniture related Sketchup there are:

                    1. Finewoodworkings blog Design Click Build and
                    2. Popular woodworking has a new cd out all about skektchup (its not free and I have not seen it so I can't comment on it)

                    I'm sure there are dozens of others in both categories but those are what I have used in the past

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                    • D Offline
                      Dadoing
                      last edited by

                      @jim said:

                      I'm not sure why Dave didn't mention it, but he and Tim Killen have written some excellent articles and videos about SketchUp work-flow and furniture.
                      In particular, these 2 videos I thought were pretty good:
                      http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/22911/a-fern-stand-demonstrating-my-drawing-process
                      http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/24328/jeffersons-bookstand-another-workflow-example

                      Awesome, thanks. I really like Dave's workflow for furniture. Makes a lot of good sense. Now, I mustget on to doing the family bookkeeping this morning! This Sketchup is a wonderful hobby in its own right, to expand my woodworking hobby. You folks are great help.

                      Problem with Sketchup is it's more fun than cleaning up sawdust and sharpening tools.

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                      • D Offline
                        Dadoing
                        last edited by

                        The helpful replies got me started. Now I'm blogging my crawl up the Sketchup Woodworking curve in http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=183&t=27728 for those who might be interested. 😎

                        Problem with Sketchup is it's more fun than cleaning up sawdust and sharpening tools.

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