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Phisherman

21/02/2008 2:23 PM

Developing a measured drawing

Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? This more of
challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
angles. As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
the chair feet touch the floor. I took an engineering drafting course
in college, which helps a little. TIA


This topic has 7 replies

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 2:27 PM


"Phisherman" wrote in message
> Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
> drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? This more of
> challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
> angles. As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
> then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
> the chair feet touch the floor. I took an engineering drafting course
> in college, which helps a little. TIA

Check your incoming e-mail.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 12/14/07
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Ja

Joe

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 11:29 PM

On Thu, 21 Feb 2008 16:00:28 -0500, J T wrote:

Try the free version of Google Sketchup 6 for Windows or Mac

http://sketchup.google.com/

It has a feature called Photomatch to create a 3D model from a photograph.
You can dimension for plan views (top, front, side, back, etc.)

You can adjust one dimension and resize model to create 1/10, 1/4, 1/2
scales, etc.

Lot's of other fun stuff like GPS sun/shadow positioning on architectural
models, textures, flythru videos, etc. Everything you'd expect from a 3D
modeling app.

Free shared 3D warehouse of models to start from including
"woodcrafts" (bowls, plates, goblets, ornaments, etc.)

Many video tutorials on youtube, etc.
Here's a few intro tutorial video links;
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRM7WXU5GrY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSuDoX8SPtU
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTFQrJQlByA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3tYEHnQwnY

Adjust textures to try different wood designs, like woodturning software
http://www.woodturnerpro.com/
http://www.creative-woodturner.com

JJ

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 4:00 PM

Thu, Feb 21, 2008, 2:23pm [email protected] (Phisherman) doth queyeth:
Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? =A0<snip>

Architect or engineer scale. Freehand sketch on a graph, or graph
paper. They work nicely for me. Or, I hear a pantograph will work, but
not tried.



JOAT
10 Out Of 10 Terrorists Prefer Hillary For President - Bumper Sticker

I do not have a problem with a woman president - except for Hillary.

Sb

"SonomaProducts.com"

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 12:28 PM

Try the free tool from Google, Sketchup. Real easy 2D and 3D, they
have a free version and although I haven't tried them they actually
have tools for creating 3D models from photographs by sketching right
over the image and they somehow learn the perspective and do all the
adjustments. At least that is how it is advertised. Might be exactly
what you need.

I can usually do all my work in 2D and being somewhat of an AutoCAD
expert I always seem to find the tools to do what I need but that
program is (was) a career in itself to learn and use.

BW


On Feb 21, 11:23=A0am, Phisherman <[email protected]> wrote:
> Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
> drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? =A0 This more of
> challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
> angles. =A0As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
> then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
> the chair feet touch the floor. =A0I took an engineering drafting course
> in college, which helps a little. =A0TIA

Ji

"Joe"

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 11:47 PM


"Joe" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
>> drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? This more of
>> challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
>> angles. As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
>> then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
>> the chair feet touch the floor. I took an engineering drafting course
>> in college, which helps a little. TIA
>
> Fww had an article on this some time ago. If I can dig up the issue, I'll
> post a reply to this message.
>
> jc
>
The issue is FWW #170, Article is Scaling Furniture from Photos written by
Miguel Gómez-Ibáñez

Good luck,

Joe

Ji

"Joe"

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 11:26 PM


"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
> drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? This more of
> challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
> angles. As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
> then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
> the chair feet touch the floor. I took an engineering drafting course
> in college, which helps a little. TIA

Fww had an article on this some time ago. If I can dig up the issue, I'll
post a reply to this message.

jc

CC

"Curran Copeland"

in reply to Phisherman on 21/02/2008 2:23 PM

21/02/2008 3:17 PM


"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Can anyone tell me any websites, books, or tips on creating a measured
> drawing from several pictures of a piece of furniture? This more of
> challenge than I originally thought as this is a chair with lots of
> angles. As a start I drew the chair (from a photograph) onto paper,
> then located the two "vanishing points" by extending the lines where
> the chair feet touch the floor. I took an engineering drafting course
> in college, which helps a little. TIA

If I remember right you will need two measurements to start with, height and
width. measure the width of the chair at the floor (this may be guess work)
and project that measurement to a point in front of the chair from the
vanishing point. You can now measure the width of any part of the chair
using that measurement or a fraction of it Do the same for the height of
the chair. I can't remember how to get the depth of the object but do
remember it is a logarithm of some sort. I am sure that some one here will
know the answer.


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