Larry_Sweeney Posted Friday at 03:56 PM Share Posted Friday at 03:56 PM I'm looking for the look shown in the attachment. I thought there was a discussion on how to do this some time ago, but I'm unable to locate it. There must be a better way than using p-solids. If someone can steer me to that thread or has a solution I'd appreciate it. Thank you Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ericepv Posted Friday at 05:08 PM Share Posted Friday at 05:08 PM I did this by drawing a polyline around the window opening (be sure to turn of interior casings) which I converted to a molding. i specified SM03 shoe molding and then aligned it to match the drywall. I also changed rte window frame depth to 5" (in a 6" wall). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
robdyck Posted Friday at 07:09 PM Share Posted Friday at 07:09 PM I don't think there's much about this process that you would like! I would probably consider creating a millwork symbol with stretch planes that you can add to each window and manually resize. Here's what experimented with: Window Frame: width: 1" / Depth: 3.5" / Inset: 0" Window Sash: Inset: 1" Window Casing: off Window Sill: custom molding drawn in section view, Extend: 1" / Inset: 2 1/2" Wall: Drywall layer = Air Gap (I know...nobody would want to do this, but this removes the drywall from view at the top of the sill) Custom molding for bullnose drywall, created in section cut, added to library, then drawn in an elevation view and manually snapped to drywall. Result: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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