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The Complete SketchList 3D Setup Guide: 9 Steps to Master Woodworking Design Software

SketchList 3D is designed for woodworkers of any level of computer experience. You don’t need CAD training or special software skills — just a willingness to explore.

As a woodworking design software created specifically for builders, SketchList runs on three simple actions: Insert, Size, and Locate. Once you’re comfortable with those, you’ll start assembling boards, parts, and complete projects as naturally as you do in your shop.

 
At its coreSketchList has three tools — presented in two forms and one spreadsheet — each simply a different way to enter or adjust your design data depending on how you like to work. 
 
Everything in SketchList comes down to three basic actions: Insert, Size, and Locate. Once you get comfortable with those, you’ll be building projects visually and intuitively — seeing boards, parts, and assemblies come together just like they would in your shop. 
 
We offer a full library of videos, tutorials, and tips to help you master the details, but before you dive in, take a few minutes to read this guide. It lays the groundwork for an efficient setup and introduces best practices that will keep your materials, reports, and library organized as your projects grow. 
If you’re just exploring the trial, a quick look may be all you need for now. But once you’ve purchased and begin using SketchList for production, following this setup process will save you hours and help your reports, materials, and libraries stay perfectly aligned. 

1. Naming Conventions: Give Part Names Meaning 

Naming is more than labeling what something *is* — it’s about describing *where it is*, *what it’s made of*, and *how it fits*. For example, ‘Side Board‘ is vague. ‘Side_Lower_Left_¾BirchPly_Dado’ is descriptive: orientation, module location, material, and joinery. Thoughtful naming makes searching, filtering, sorting, and reporting far easier.

2. Materials Database: Setup, Costs & Custom Finishes 

Your materials database powers cost tracking, rendering realism, and accurate reporting. A clean, organized database ensures everything else in SketchList works smoothly.

How to set it up

  1. Open Materials Database from the main menu.
  2. Review the existing entries and delete or clean up duplicates.
  3. Add or edit materials with:
    • Name (e.g., “¾ Birch Plywood” or “19 mm Birch Plywood”)
    • Material Type (Sheet or Solid)
    • Thickness (matching your unit system)
    • Grain direction (when relevant)
    • Cost per unit (sheet, board-foot, or linear foot)

Adding custom colors and species

  1. Click Add New Material → Browse Image.

  2. Choose a JPG or PNG showing the wood grain or color.

  3. Adjust scale/orientation.

  4. Save and apply the new material to boards for realistic rendering.

3. Clone, Mirror & Resize: Work Smarter, Not Harder 

One of the biggest efficiency gains in SketchList comes from duplication functions:

  • Clone: Makes an exact duplicate of a board or assembly. 
  • Mirror: Flips orientation (left ↔ right) — useful for symmetric cabinets. 
  • Clone & Space: Duplicates units evenly along a wall. 

 You only need one master size of each cabinet type (e.g., a one‑door base unit). Resizing in SketchList is so quick that building dozens of fixed sizes is unnecessary. 

4. Reports & Templates: Make Output Work for You

Reports are where your design data becomes actionable.
Go to Reports → Parts List → Customize Columns, and include fields like:

  • Part Name
  • Material
  • Dimensions
  • Quantity
  • Cost
  • Notes

Add your shop logo and contact information to the header or footer, then save this setup as your master template. Every time you generate a parts list or cut list, load this template to maintain a consistent, professional look.

5. Your Personal Library: Build the Foundation

Your library is your personal collection of reusable designs — the parts, boards, doors, drawers, and assemblies you’ll use again and again. Think of it as your digital toolbox.

Two ways to build it:

  • Dedicated Setup Time: Build your library from the ground up, starting with basic components. This gives you a clean, consistent foundation.
  • As You Go: Add items to your library as you design. This is fast and natural, though you might capture project-specific versions.

Most woodworkers use a blend of both,  establishing core parts early, then growing the library as they work.

How to add items to your library

  1. Right-click a part or assembly → Add to Library.
  2. Choose a category (Board, Door, Drawer, Assembly).
  3.  Give it a clear, descriptive name.
  4. Save it to the appropriate folder (e.g., Kitchen, Closet, Shop Fixtures).
  5. Back up your library folder regularly: Documents → SketchList3D → Library

6. Project Images for Better Visual Management

Add thumbnail images to your projects to make navigation easier. After rendering or finishing a layout, go to Project Database → Edit Project Info → Add Image. Upload a front or perspective view and save it. Your project list will now display thumbnails instead of names only — a small step that makes a big difference. 

7. Core Tools Overview

8. Getting Help When You Need It

SketchList 3D includes built-in help options and plenty of external resources to support you. You can access them from the top menu or the lower-right ‘?’ button on the canvas. 

Inside the app

  • Quick Guide: Short overview for first-time users.
  • Video Guides: Opens the SketchList YouTube playlists.
  • Manual: Opens the full SketchList 3D manual in your browser.
  • Design Tools: Shortcut explanations and reference.
  • Request Support: Opens an email or browser window to contact support.

Outside the app

  • Clone & Mirror Tutorial

9. Setup To‑Do Checklist 

☐ Decide and document your naming convention.

☐ Choose and lock in your unit system (Imperial or Metric).

☐ Review and clean your Materials Database.

☐ Add missing materials, species, colors, and costs.

☐ Save a branded Parts List Template.

☐ Create one master cabinet type and add it to your Library.

☐ Use Clone/Mirror to create variations.

☐ Add thumbnail images to your projects.

☐ Back up your Library and Materials Database.

☐ Try the sample box exercise.

☐ Watch YouTube tutorials and subscribe to the SketchList 3D channel.

Final Thoughts — From One Woodworker to Another 

SketchList 3D was built by woodworkers for woodworkers. It’s more than a design tool — it’s a way to think through your projects, save time, and bring your craftsmanship into the digital world.

With your setup complete, you’re ready to create, refine, and build — faster, smarter, and with confidence. 

Enjoy the trial, and see you in the shop (or the virtual one, at least).

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Blog Welcome

Six Things to Know About Cabinet Design Software

I watch You Tube videos,  read a lot of blog posts and get many emails about  the use of cabinet design software for  woodworking businesses or home shops.   It’s important to make the right decision about which software to use. Going in the wrong direction wastes time and causes frustration.

There are six basic things to know…

1.  SketchList 3D lets you “build” a 3D model of what you want to make.  This model is created using the same building blocks you use in your shop – boards, hardware, assemblies, doors and drawers.  Other programs  – the CAD ones – are drawing programs in which you create your design with lines, rectangles, or squares.  Still other software has you drag cabinets into your design – not exactly custom work at that point!  You want to create a model that looks like the work you are going to create in your shop.   It’s easier to think your way through the design that way.

Model entertianment unit cabinet design software

2. You most probably already know most of what you need to know to create your model.  Think of putting a sheet of  3/4  (20) wood on your saw and cutting 2 parts – say 12 X 36 (300 X 900).  Put them on your workbench an line up the bottom edges.  Pull one part to the left 24 inches (600).  There you have the uprights of your book case.  Cut 3 more parts 12 x 24 (300 X 600) and put them between and at 90 degrees the uprights.  Space them 24  inches apart.  You have you bookcase!  This is exactly how you model the bookcase in SketchList 3D – except  you can make as many adjustments as you want in minutes with no cost in materials!

 

3.  What you need for your work is built into SketchList 3D.  This software was designed for woodworking.  It ‘knows’ joinery, edging, miters, moldings, drawers, doors….

  • Need a bull nose?  Select the edge, click contour, pick bull nose and there it is!
  • Need a tenon?  Select the edge, click joinery, pick tenon and there it is!
  • Drill a hole?  Pick the surface, click holes, enter location and size and there it is!
  • Want to even space shelves over a distance – pick shelf, click clone and space, enter quantity and start and stop points and there they are!

Cutting tenon and dados with cabinet design software.

 

4.  If you’ve used a computer before – you can use SketchList 3D.  The interface is graphic and changes are shown instantly.  You enter information using spreadsheet or forms.  You navigate with icons, buttons, and menu selections.  SketchList users everyday terms like board, door, left, right, width, top and bottom…

5.  You can work at the level of detail necessary to do your job.     With SketchList 3D you can reuse old designs – like a cabinet or case – just by inserting it into the project.  Buy door or drawers?  Enter their design and size once – then insert and change the sizes to fit your need.  Assemblies can be modified to fit where needed.   But there are times – when you are doing truly custom work – that you need to model on a detailed  board by board level to exactly grab the requirements of the job.  SketchList 3D is built to help you do just that.  Either way you can do it.

6. Reports and shop drawings must be built in and integrated with the design.  In traditional CAD packages at the drawing is the end product.

But you need to get beyond that and have

  • parts lists
  • cut lists,
  • purchase reports,
  • shop drawings,
  • and most importantly layout diagrams for optimized cut lists plus sizes.
    (This actually saves you money by minimizing materials needed for the job!)

With SketchList 3D every time you make a change to your model – add, delete or re-size a board – that change is instantly reflected throughout all of your reports.   This saves time and guarantees last second changes make it to your reports and drawings.  Of course high quality photo like 3D images are always there for you and your client to see.

optimized cutlist plus layouts

Pull out desk - furniture design software

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Watch the video on our web site – www.sketchlist.com.  And try it out – download the free 30 day trial and see for your self.