I’m currently working on a variation on L & J. G. Stickley’s No. 220 prairie settle. The settle’s three sides consist of frame and panels. Because I’m building a shorter version, I need to shorten the rails and resize the panels. Before SketchUp, I would have subtracted the combined width of the stiles from the rails, divided that number by the number of panels and added twice the overlap of stile and rail to calculate final panel width. Using the SketchUp Copy command, I can avoid the math and distribute the necessary number of stiles along a rail automatically (this even distribution of objects along a line is also known as a linear array).
I begin by selecting the component I want to distribute by clicking on it with the Select tool.
I activate the Move tool (I use the keyboard shortcut M) and hit the Alt key (Windows) or Option key (Mac) to activate Copy. A plus sign appears at the upper right of the Move pointer to indicate Copy is active. I click on the lower corner of the component and move it to its final location.
I then type the number of times I want the component to be copied followed by / and hit the Enter/Return key (Windows/Mac). In this example, I want two instances of the stile to be distributed along the rail, so I type 2/ and hit Enter. Note how /2 appears in the measurement field of the window.
My stiles are now properly distributed along the rail. To finish up the side, I can fill the frame with panels.
— Michael Crow
Michael is the author of “Building Classic Arts & Crafts Furniture: Shop Drawings for 33 Traditional Charles Limbert Projects” (Popular Woodworking), which is available now at ShopWoodworking in both print and eBook formats. He’s now working on his next book, due out in the spring from Popular Woodworking: “Mid-Century Modern Furniture.”Here are some supplies and tools we find essential in our everyday work around the shop. We may receive a commission from sales referred by our links; however, we have carefully selected these products for their usefulness and quality.
One minor point… It’s the key to activate copy from move in Windows.
Thanks for this post! Bob Lang covered this nicely in his video course, but I ALWAYS seem to forget how to quickly execute it.
This post was a nice reminder for me to go and practice it a few times…
Please don’t inflict Sketchup on this fine blog and magazine. Pick up a pencil, compass, ruler and paper and draw. There is more to be learned doing it long-hand – both about yourself and the project.
Note, it should be the key in Windows to activate the copy command. The key activates the menus in a standard Sketchup session.