A new spec house. Dressed it up a bit.
More fun with interior renderings
#1
Posted 27 February 2018 - 06:40 PM
- Keith Almond, Steve and Carla Farnam and Brent Hyndman like this
Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#2
Posted 27 February 2018 - 06:51 PM
I am putting "Easter eggs" in my renderings. A zoom in of the family room picture above. Got to have a little fun! I may have been a little loaded when someone took that picture.
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Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#4
Posted 27 February 2018 - 07:07 PM
Thanks Steve!
Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#6
Posted 27 February 2018 - 09:10 PM
Nice work Martin ... Since we typically do one off custom homes for individual clients, we can't justify spending that much time on each job, so I never get to go mad. Maybe one day I'll model my own home and try and get all the furniture and everything modelled ... Nice idea, but I bet it never happens!
Once again. Very nice work on the renderings.
There are 10 types of people in this world ....... Those who understand binary, and those who don't.
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www.homehardwarekingston.ca
#8
Posted 27 February 2018 - 10:09 PM
Nice 3D work Sam!
Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#11
Posted 28 February 2018 - 08:31 AM
Hi Martin, how do you create the skylight tunnel?
#12
Posted 28 February 2018 - 09:26 AM
I created a wall with just drywall. It is actually offset to the rough floor like all the other walls (in this case they were drawn on the upper floor plan) and I rake both the top and bottom fit to the ceiling and the underside of the roof sheathing and aligned with the "hole" in the sloped ceiling. The horizontal ceiling is drawn as a double hip with the first part horizontal and a narrow segment with about a 36/12 slope to reach the top edge of the skylight. I also attach a narrow strip of ceiling with about a 36/12 slope to the "just drywall" wall at the bottom edge of the skylight to close off that gap. That takes care of the light box opening between the roof trusses. I use a sloped beam between the skylights (which is the way I frame them) with the drywall option selected. The screen capture below is from the drawings for the pictures at the start of this thread. The section drawing is from another project showing the detail cut across similar skylights
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- Tom Rogers likes this
Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#13
Posted 28 February 2018 - 04:29 PM
And sometimes I am just lazy if they are parallel cord roof trusses and I fill the cavity with insulation and make it the same colour as the drywall.
- Allen McDonnell likes this
Five out of four people are not very good with fractions
#14
Posted 01 March 2018 - 09:33 AM
Thank you Martin, next skylight i do i'll try your approach. Also, i'm going to create a wall called 'just drywall' right now. I commonly have 2nd floor open to below and no way to seal off the end joist so it looks proper....now i'll use 'just drywall' wall.
thanks again
joe
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