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    Some recent real world woodwork

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • bazB Offline
      baz
      last edited by

      First off, don't bother opening the images, they are the same size as you see now.

      Just completed 8 large pieces for a new golf club, mostly hand laid veneer on ply and MDF substrates. Had to build a vacuum bagging unit to do the curved work. Took 6 days a week for 12 weeks. Crap photos but will take forever to get some decent finished shots.
      SU was a godsend as usual, especially for the CNC work and the curved molds.
      Cheers
      Baz.

      waiters station

      Waiters station base 2100mm wide

      DiningTable1500mm.jpg

      1800mm diam

      DiningTable1500mmPTop.jpg

      FeatureTable1500mmP.jpg

      FeatureTable1500mm.jpg

      No photo of this, was snatched out of the workshop on a deadline!
Took 6 blokes.

      Real world drawing, and this is one of the tidier ones. :(

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      • D Offline
        davidheim1
        last edited by

        Great work.

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        • cottyC Offline
          cotty
          last edited by

          Very nice!

          my SketchUp gallery

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          • Dave RD Offline
            Dave R
            last edited by

            Very nice, Barry.It's cool to see the SketchUp drawing and the real thing.

            Etaoin Shrdlu

            %

            (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

            G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

            M30

            %

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            • R Offline
              roland joseph
              last edited by

              Beautiful pieces. If you are just constructing them ....wow!! If you designed them then double wow. I would much enjoy seeing them in there final place when that happens.

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              • bazB Offline
                baz
                last edited by

                @roland joseph said:

                Beautiful pieces. If you are just constructing them ....wow!! If you designed them then double wow. I would much enjoy seeing them in there final place when that happens.

                Thanks for all your kind comments.
                Design them? Interesting question that. It comes up all the time in my work for architects and interior or landscape designers.

                Here is all I got from the client for these two tables.
                So the concept wasn't mine, but the rest?

                featuresketch1.jpg

                featuresketch2.jpg

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                • pbacotP Offline
                  pbacot
                  last edited by

                  Nice work!!! What is the construction of the s-shaped legs? Laminated? Solid wood?

                  MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                  • bazB Offline
                    baz
                    last edited by

                    Thanks PB. Plywood lamination with 0.6mm oak veneer.

                    Ply-Lams.jpg

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                    • R Offline
                      roland joseph
                      last edited by

                      "Design them? Interesting question that"
                      Yes...lol, I know exactly what you mean. I would say he had a concept and you followed with the finished design.

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                      • brooklynia373B Offline
                        brooklynia373
                        last edited by

                        Beautiful veneer work, especially on the legs and those cylinders at the base of the waiters station. Bravo.

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                        • bazB Offline
                          baz
                          last edited by

                          @brooklynia373 said:

                          Beautiful veneer work, especially on the legs and those cylinders at the base of the waiters station. Bravo.

                          Thanks Tom, much appreciated.
                          Finally got some In-situ shots...

                          Entrance-Table-600web.jpg

                          SideTable-600Web.jpg

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                          • brooklynia373B Offline
                            brooklynia373
                            last edited by

                            Stellar.

                            Curious about the design process...when a designer hands you that sketch... you respond with a SketchUp rendering (as opposed to a shop drawing)? and thats how you get final approval to build?

                            Trying to learn.

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                            • bazB Offline
                              baz
                              last edited by

                              @brooklynia373 said:

                              Stellar.

                              Curious about the design process...when a designer hands you that sketch... you respond with a SketchUp rendering (as opposed to a shop drawing)? and thats how you get final approval to build?

                              Trying to learn.

                              In this case, no shop drawings were contemplated until the design was sorted, it went back and forth about 4 times. And in this case client wasn't interested in shop drawings, (which implies either trust or naivety)!

                              The beauty of SU tho, is that as I was refining the design, I was also inevitably starting to sort out the practical construction problems so by the time I had approval, little had to be done for shop drawings. Of course this is much easier if you are also the designer/maker.

                              The other route for this sort of work is front/side/plan drawings from interior designers and/or archictects, and in Oz they don't do 3d much. And they expect you to go straight to shop drawings. That can be a bit of fun when you show them a 3d model which couldn't possibly work in the real world.

                              But sometimes even a model won't inform people and you have to resort to this...

                              It will bloody fall over!!!

                              And depending on the job, I will often whip up a quick render in Twilight, clients love that.

                              Its also a good idea to use 'Sketchy styles' in the early stages, when you want to emphasise a fluid flexible design.

                              Best advice I can give is put yourself in the clients shoes and remember what Sam Goldwin said: "Nobody ever went broke by underestimating the public's taste".

                              Baz
                              PS: I am broke as we speak 😞

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                              • brooklynia373B Offline
                                brooklynia373
                                last edited by

                                @baz said:

                                The beauty of SU tho, is that as I was refining the design, I was also inevitably starting to sort out the practical construction problems so by the time I had approval, little had to be done for shop drawings. Of course this is much easier if you are also the designer/maker.

                                This is one of the reasons I love SU. When I do any model that will eventually be realized in the real world I walk thru the steps of how its parts will be made and then assembled. I usually get way to detailed (like actually modeling inlay as opposed to drawing it on the surface) but that helps me figure out how and if the thing can be built, and gauge the amount of work involved.

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                                • bazB Offline
                                  baz
                                  last edited by

                                  @brooklynia373 said:

                                  This is one of the reasons I love SU. When I do any model that will eventually be realized in the real world I walk thru the steps of how its parts will be made and then assembled. I usually get way to detailed (like actually modeling inlay as opposed to drawing it on the surface) but that helps me figure out how and if the thing can be built, and gauge the amount of work involved.

                                  I'd interested in seeing an example of your work? Model and real of course.

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