From Layout to Cut List in One Place
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Why we built Blueprint
Planning cabinets is either expensive, slow, or unnecessarily complicated.
If you hire a designer, you get drawings and visuals, but not always something you can build from directly. If you use professional cabinet software, you spend more time learning the tool than actually planning your project.
There is a gap between a rough idea and something you can actually build. That is where Blueprint sits.
From idea to something usable
Most people start with a rough layout in mind. Where cabinets should go, how long a wall run is, where a tall unit fits. Getting that into a clear plan usually means redrawing it several times or explaining it back and forth with someone else.
Blueprint removes that step. You define the space, place cabinets, and see the layout immediately in 3D. You are not guessing how things fit. You are working with actual sizes from the start.
Cabinets are not just boxes
A cabinet is not a single object. It is a set of panels, openings, shelves, doors, and drawers that all depend on each other.
Most tools stop at showing the outside. Blueprint goes inside the cabinet and lets you define how it is built. You split it into sections, add shelves, choose doors or drawers, and control the details that matter when it is time to build.
The result is not just a shape on screen. It is a structure.
One place for layout and build data
Normally, layout and build information live in different places. You plan in one tool and then calculate sizes somewhere else.
Blueprint keeps everything together. The same cabinet you place in the room is the one that generates panel sizes and cut lists. There is no second step where things need to be translated or redrawn.
Faster for small shops and simple projects
Small shops and individual builders often do not have time to prepare full drawings for every job. At the same time, they still need clear dimensions and structure.
Blueprint is built so you can go from empty room to a usable layout quickly. You can place cabinets, adjust them, and get the information needed to build without going through a long setup process.
Visuals that help you decide
Seeing how things look matters just as much as getting the sizes right.
Blueprint lets you assign materials, colors, and textures to cabinets, walls, and floors so you can preview the final result before anything is built.
This is not about decoration for its own sake. It is about making real decisions — how materials work together, how the space feels, and whether the layout makes sense visually.
Photo mode gives you a clean view of the space so you can review proportions, materials, and overall balance with everything applied.
What it replaces
Blueprint replaces a mix of sketches, rough 3D models, and manual calculations.
Instead of switching between tools, everything happens in one place. You define the space, place cabinets, decide how they are built, and get the result directly.
What it does not try to be
Blueprint is not trying to cover every possible case or become a full CAD system.
It focuses on one problem: planning cabinets in a real space and ending up with something you can build.
If that is the problem you are solving, it should feel straightforward to use.