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    Timber types

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • dermotcollD Offline
      dermotcoll
      last edited by

      Again, thanks for the link to those textures.

      When you burn your arse - you gotta sit on the blisters!!

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      • C Offline
        chrisjk
        last edited by

        Dan,
        That is a terrific link - thank you for sharing it. I had been using the hobbithouse site for wood pics but the samples are small and so scaling/tiling issues abound - although it is an outstanding site for most other purposes requiring wood pictures.

        Chris

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        • S Offline
          shipwrght
          last edited by

          You are welcome, glad I could share this. The attached image is a book and butt matched Mahogany crotch. These, if cropped at the right places, will tile seamlessly. Just like if you have a stack of consecutive veneers to cut for a table top. If you are just book matching (most common for long pieces) you only need to crop out a book matched pair. With book and butt you need two wide and two long.
          Dan


          Crotch cut Mahog..png

          my website http://www.shipwrightstyle.com

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          • B Offline
            Bloonose
            last edited by

            All I've been able to manage is this, which uses a jpeg of some burr elm veneer which I used on a credenza I made. I did use a plugin by Chris Fuller via this site to fill in every area at one stroke wich is very handy 😉 but as you can see to loose the tile effect made the burr really big! but I'll keep looking and experimenting.

            The finished items alway look better than the sketchup's IMHO 😆
            Thanks for taking the time to help 😄

            http://i49.tinypic.com/2ijta8m.jpg

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            • B Offline
              Bloonose
              last edited by

              A link for some more unusual veneers, go though all the available pages at the left!

              favicon

              (www.alpi.it)

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              • Dave RD Offline
                Dave R
                last edited by

                @bloonose said:

                ...but as you can see to loose the tile effect made the burr really big!

                Unfortunately, even with the material scaled up, the effect is still there. As I said before, highly figured grains don't work so well because at some point the image will repeat. You need to find images of larger pieces of wood. It would be nice to be able to get good images of both faces of all the boards in a tree along with the ends and edges. That would really give you a great deal of flexibility.

                The link you posted is interesting. It's too bad the samples aren't lit better and aren't longer.

                Etaoin Shrdlu

                %

                (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

                G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

                M30

                %

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                • S Offline
                  shipwrght
                  last edited by

                  Dave I agree with you on the problem of repeating grain patterns, for most wood you need long samples for them to look natural. And for them to look good each texture needs to be carefully mapped to the component. Unless you are using veneer they need to be from different boards or at least different parts of a board. If you look at the drawer faces on the Cherry cabinet in my previous post you will see what a quick and dirty job I did on that. If they were veneer they should match and if solid should not, they do neither really. The exceptions would be burls and crotches. These are normally not very big to start with and are commonly booked and butted. On the top of the credenza, if I was building it, I would use 2 wide book matched and at least 6 long, and more likely 4 wide by 8 long. This makes for small pieces, but with much burl you would be lucky to get 10" x 14" usable pieces anyway. When done it should look fairly convincing.
                  Here is another site that has some decent samples of panels that are about 4' long, the actual images are about 700 pixels long. http://www.oakwoodveneer.com/index.html
                  Look under samples. They are big enough to be useful but not perfect.
                  Dan

                  my website http://www.shipwrightstyle.com

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                  • F Offline
                    frv
                    last edited by

                    Incredible woodtextures can be found at Arroway textures
                    http://www.arroway-textures.com/en/products/wood-1/contents

                    I use these myself and I would not like anything larger for a texture really. Have a look at the other wood textures as well and the user gallery. I think this is the best and worth it.

                    yesterday I made this table with it
                    http://homepage.mac.com/fillieverhoeven/leaves/large-3.html

                    I am not advertising I hope, I am just a customer who loves to share his joy about something great,
                    Francois

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                    • C Offline
                      chrisjk
                      last edited by

                      The free versions of the Arroway textures are good for a lot of furniture sized items.

                      Chris

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                      • F Offline
                        frv
                        last edited by

                        I agree, especially if the textures are just used within Sketchup. If you want to render in close up you might need the bigger ones.
                        Francois

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                        • A Offline
                          Arx
                          last edited by

                          Here's a number of wood textures, most of them seamless.


                          wood.zip

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                          • M Offline
                            MartinRinehart
                            last edited by

                            If you're doing fancy veneering, good luck!

                            This article will show you how to turn "Wood_Cherry_Original" into a variety of lighter and darker woods that work for models. http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial/tutorial_ww_tip_01.html

                            If your goal is a beautiful model, this isn't enough. If your goal is a beautiful finished piece, the model doesn't have to have perfect grains.

                            Author, Edges to Rubies - The Complete SketchUp Tutorial at http://www.MartinRinehart.com/models/tutorial.

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