Face Frame, Frameless, Overlay & Inset
Learn how CabWriter deals with face frame and frameless designs and how overlay doors fit into the overall picture.
Joe Zeh, an accomplished lifelong woodworker, is an electrical engineer with more than 35 years experience in the computer and graphics industry, ranging from computer design to executive management. He retired as Vice President & General Manager, Desktop Graphics Development at ATI Technologies Inc, now acquired by AMD.
Joe was introduced to SketchUp when he read a Fine Woodworking article titled ‘A Quick Course in SketchUp’ by Tim Killen in December of 2007. He immediately dropped the other 3D drawing applications he used to model his furniture. By mid- 2008 Joe was writing SketchUp tutorials and teaching live courses in his home.
While SketchUp was ideally suited for woodworkers, it lacked a few features; but it had an applications programming interface (API) using the Ruby language. Joe set about learning Ruby and began to plug those holes. Shortly after Joe was introduced to Greg through one of Greg’s students. He began teaching SketchUp at Greg’s New England School of Architectural Woodworking (NESAW). That partnership was the beginning of CutList Bridge and CabWriter.
Joe continues to teach SketchUp both in video and live courses. He recently published a book titled SketchUp – A Design Guide for Woodworkers. He offers free SketchUp plans and help on his blog.
Learn how CabWriter deals with face frame and frameless designs and how overlay doors fit into the overall picture.
Learn how to use the ‘Re-Draw Selected Cabinets’ tool to change the characteristics of an existing cabinet and explore the Box Selector dialog to learn about the settings that you can change on a per box bases.
Learn to create tall divided base cabinet, standard upper cabinet, standard diagonal corner cabinet and a four box divided upper cabinet while learning some new SketchUp tricks and CabWriter tools.
Explore the very important CabWriter concept of cabinet DNA. Each and every part of a cabinet has the DNA for the entire cabinet which allows you to extract the settings from any existing cabinet to duplicate it in the future, essentially turning every cabinet you’ve ever drawn into a library.
Dive deeper into parameters in the CabWriter settings dialog box while completing the base cabinets for our kitchen.
In this lesson, we’ll show you how quick and easy it is to draw a cabinet, then slow down and show you the in’s and out’s of cabinet creation and how to master the story stick and decipher stile types.
Start with an overview of the kitchen we’ll create in this multi-part CabWriter course. You’ll be introduced to the various scenes needed for exporting to LayOut and take a look at what is necessary to create a cut list and look at two types of optimization tools: CutList Plus fx from Bridgewood Design and Cut2D Pro from Vectric. We’ll also show how easy it is to use CabWriter CNC to export DXF files of your parts to that can be used to generate tool paths for your CNC.
