M-Ferioli Posted February 20, 2020 Share Posted February 20, 2020 Is there a reasonable way to make all the doors and drawers on a cabinet look like they were cut from one sheet of veneered plywood? example attached. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DzinEye Posted February 20, 2020 Share Posted February 20, 2020 I think it's doable, but it would be a huge chunk of time to pull off. The biggest hurdle just to start is that you'd need to have a photo of a full sheet of veneered plywood. Then in a photo editing program you'd need to break it up into pieces just as if you were building it from that sheet of plywood... then number or otherwise name each piece so you know where it goes. Then turn each one into a separate individually named material in chief and paint onto each door/drawer panel. However... If you just needed the look for a 3D view without actually having individual cabinets modeled, you could do it much easier/faster by modeling the whole visible face of the cabinet from polyline solids, convert all to solids then select all, do a solid union and THEN paint on the plywood material, which will then cover the whole thing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
M-Ferioli Posted February 20, 2020 Author Share Posted February 20, 2020 so basically I ended up kind of making it the second way but I built the panel in sketchup and then painted it with walnut in chief.. It didn't take too long but only worth it on a small job like this which is basically two cabinets side by side. I was hoping there might be an easier way that I couldn't think of. Thanks for your thoughts Mark Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
M-Ferioli Posted February 20, 2020 Author Share Posted February 20, 2020 Placed in the job and added some hardware. Better not be any changes to this cabinet! haha! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DzinEye Posted February 20, 2020 Share Posted February 20, 2020 There you go.... looks good! I was almost going to suggest Sketchup, but for this Chief is pretty quick to model it too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
M-Ferioli Posted February 20, 2020 Author Share Posted February 20, 2020 Thanks! Luckily I found a decent image of some walnut grain. Yeah, I don't model things in chief. Only because I never really dedicated any time to learning how to get good and fast at it. I'm pretty comfortable with sketchup and it just seems much more intuitive for that kind of stuff so I just do it there. But really I should learn that skill at some point. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alaskan_Son Posted February 20, 2020 Share Posted February 20, 2020 This can actually be done pretty quickly with Chief for quick renderings... 1. Find or create a texture with an appropriate grain pattern that is large enough to cover the door and drawer fronts of your entire unit. 2. Paint your cabinet boxes with the appropriate material and paint the door and drawer fronts with a different material (any material should do, it just needs to be different) 3. Group select the desired cabinets and Convert Selected To Symbol 4. Delete those cabinets (assume this is done in a separate Save As version of the plan) 5. Drop that new symbol into your plan to replace the deleted cabinets 6. Paint the desired material onto the door and drawer fronts 7. Define the material as NOT Stretch To Fit, set the appropriate scale (needs to be large enough to cover the unit), and check Global Symbol Mapping 8. Inspect in 3D and then adjust Horizontal and/or Vertical Offsets(s) as necessary 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ridge_Runner Posted February 20, 2020 Share Posted February 20, 2020 16 hours ago, M-Ferioli said: Placed in the job and added some hardware. Looks good to me. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
M-Ferioli Posted February 20, 2020 Author Share Posted February 20, 2020 Michael, Thanks for that contribution, I did not think of that at all but will definitely try that out. Always good to have a faster solution at hand. Mike...Thanks! Mark, I Think you might have to change your name to mike to be in this post...HAHA! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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