It is best to do a Google search for the specific item you are
interested in. You will find that many people have asked the same
thing and have gotten various answers--some helpful--to the same
question.
I use plans mostly for construction techniques. For example, I bought
Furniture Designs, Inc. plan for a dresser:
http://www.furnituredesigns.com/727.htm
and built this:
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v384/eganders/Dresserstained1.jpg
Some of the construction techniques were questionable in the Furniture
Design Plans and, believe it or not, the Stickley catalog has a good
amount of information on suggested construction techniques.
By downloading the Stickley catalog here:
http://www.stickley.com/gallery/index.html
and using the photo of the dresser on page 109 combined with the
Furniture Design plans and a story stick (look that one up too) the
rest was just cranking.
Kevin S. Main wrote:
> Does anyone know of any good woodworking plan software at a
reasonable
> price....FREE!!!! or otherwise.
>
> Kevin S Main
I have lignum cad for linux, it's made for wood working projects, it's OK, a
little on the flaky side, keeps crashing, it's still version 0.2 so it
hasn't made it out of the bata stage yet, I used Qcad when I was running
Mandrake, but I can only get the demo version to run on Suse 9.2, I keep
having problems with the community version, I think it's a Qt issue, I'd
love to here if anyone else has gotten it to work
Kevin S. Main wrote:
> Does anyone know of any good woodworking plan software at a reasonable
> price....FREE!!!! or otherwise.
>
> Kevin S Main
In article <kn5%d.87982$Ze3.36103@attbi_s51>, Kevin S. Main
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Does anyone know of any good woodworking plan software at a reasonable
> price....FREE!!!! or otherwise.
Paper, pencil, and the wetware between your ears.
--
"I'm a man, but I can change... If I have to... I guess." -- Red Green
On the rare occasion I feel the need for computer involvement in the design
process I use Visio. Pretty good at printing out precise sectional views of
say a window sash or door stile too. You can draw in the measurement system
you prefer and when it comes to printing it it comes out the right size. Oh
and it's a doddle to learn.
Nicholas
--
Nicholas Buttle - Quality Joinery and Cabinet Making
http://www.nbjoinery.net
--
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> It is best to do a Google search for the specific item you are
> interested in. You will find that many people have asked the same
> thing and have gotten various answers--some helpful--to the same
> question.
>
> I use plans mostly for construction techniques. For example, I bought
> Furniture Designs, Inc. plan for a dresser:
>
> http://www.furnituredesigns.com/727.htm
>
> and built this:
>
> http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v384/eganders/Dresserstained1.jpg
>
> Some of the construction techniques were questionable in the Furniture
> Design Plans and, believe it or not, the Stickley catalog has a good
> amount of information on suggested construction techniques.
>
>
> By downloading the Stickley catalog here:
>
> http://www.stickley.com/gallery/index.html
>
> and using the photo of the dresser on page 109 combined with the
> Furniture Design plans and a story stick (look that one up too) the
> rest was just cranking.
>
>
>
>
> Kevin S. Main wrote:
>> Does anyone know of any good woodworking plan software at a
> reasonable
>> price....FREE!!!! or otherwise.
>>
>> Kevin S Main
>