3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX

Rate & Review Product

Please wait...
Walnut Cabinet
$55.00
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
3ds max walnut cabinet - Walnut Cabinet by PerspectX
DescriptionA cabinet is usually a box-shaped form, either standing alone as a piece of furniture or built into or attached to a wall (such as a medicine cabinet) typically made of wood but now often made of synthetic materials, and used for storage of miscellaneous items. Cabinets usually have one or more doors on the front that are mounted with door hardware and occasionally a lock; they may also contain drawers. Short cabinets often have a finished surface on top that can be used for display, or as a working surface such as the countertops found in kitchens. (Wiki)  TextureTexture maps are provided.  HistoryThe term “cabinet” is now generally understood a medium to large size piece of furniture dedicated to storage, which is accessed by doors and may consist of many small drawers or open shelving.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  The earliest cabinets, however, were specifically designed for the storage of papers and other valuables. They were also used as places for writing, which led eventually to a distinct type typified by secretaries and bureaux. Cabinets are thought to have been the result of the realization that since chests were useful as seating, providing access via the front rather than the top was more convenient, and that then raising the chest higher made frontal access easier than having to bend down. Consequently, the cabinet, as a form of front-opening chest placed on top of another chest or on a table, and ultimately on its own legs, was born.While early cabinets are invariably mounted on a stand, later examples (which still use legs or feet) tend to include an inferior storage space, which while accessed from the front may use drawers as well as doors, and sometimes drawers hidden behind doors.Always an important piece of furniture by virtue of the preciousness of its contents, and consequently an article upon which the best craftsmanship was often lavished in the form of precious woods, inlay, marquetry, veneering, and carving, the cabinet ultimately grew in size often to become the most dominant piece of furniture in a room. As a result its maker - the cabinetmaker - became the most highly regarded woodworker, especially in distinction to the joiner, who employed the more straightforward solid-wood construction of frame-and paneling.It is somewhat ironic that the term 'cabinetmaker' now generally refers to a maker of relatively short-lived built-in kitchen cabinets. The only point of similarity being that the fundamental construction rests on a common technique, namely the use of opposing 'plies' or veneers to produce a large continuous surface rather than the older method of frame-and-paneling.Almost anything may be kept in a cabinet, and so define it as a specific variety, some of the more common being a china cabinet (typically provided with glazed doors), a display cabinet, a curio cabinet, a tool cabinet, and a jewelry cabinet.Other varieties refer to selF explanatory construction peculiarities, such as a wall cabinet, a hanging cabinet, or a corner c
Recently Viewed Products
$.00
max
$.00
3ds max fbx
$.00
3ds max obj
$.00
dwg
$.95
3ds max
$.00
dxf
$.95
3ds max obj
Related Products
$.00
3ds lwo obj blend
$.00
3ds max dxf lwo obj xsi
$.00
3ds lwo obj xsi fbx blend oth
$.00
ma 3ds dxf lwo obj
$.00
3ds max dxf lwo obj xsi
$.00
3ds max dxf lwo obj xsi
$.00
ma fbx
More Products by this Artist
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi c4d fbx
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi c4d fbx
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo xsi c4d
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi c4d
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi c4d
$.00
ma 3ds max lwo obj xsi c4d
Product File Downloads
Softimage 3.5 (.hrc, .xsi, .scn)  7.2 MB
3ds Max 5.1 (.max)  8.6 MB
OBJ N/A (.obj)  6.7 MB
Maya 6.0 (.ma, .mb)  14 MB
3D Studio N/A (.3ds)  4.7 MB
Lightwave 6.5 (.lwo, .lw, .lws)  6.7 MB
Cinema 4D 9 (.c4d, .xml)  6.4 MB
Ask us anything about this product...
on all products sold by TurboSquid
free conversions to popular formats
Product License
Standard Royalty FreeView License
FAQ
3D Model Specifications
Product ID:429993
Published:Nov 22, 2008
Geometry:Polygonal
Polygons:157,784
Vertices:158,963
Textures:Yes
Materials:Yes
Rigged:No
Animated:No
UV Mapped:Unknown
Unwrapped UVs:Unknown
Previews
Product Rating
Unrated