I did some design drawings today for a client on this stuff. Haven't done that in a very long time. It was fun, but I lost the mini cigarette butt in my lead pointed, and my 'scum bag'.
I was never the best draftsman on paper, but I must say I'm not the worst either. Anyone still drawing on paper?
I have a manual drafting class tomorrow night. :) I feel like I'm back in high school. I was dismayed at first (thought it might be AutoCAD) until I realized that I could get a really nice drawing-- plans, 3D, dimensions, titleblock, logo, the whole thing-- then frame it as art. I very much like architectural drawings as art.
When in school I used to waste a bunch of time getting my gold-tipped Kohinoor sketch pen unclogged, and wiping ink off of inappropriate surfaces. hehe The final product could be beautiful with chewy raised black ink on toothy paper. I like ink because it asks you to be more deliberate. Now it's disposable felt tips on trace....all business.
Most of it is perfunctory at best, but when it's good, it's humbling to look at. At my second job out of school, they used to put all the new graduates next to the best draftsman (technologist) in the studio with the intention that some of that skill would rub off on us. It did, and I'm still grateful to the guy.
I miss the physical aspects of drafting on paper, but there's no turning back from CAD. Might as well embrace it. Being good at it got me through the last recession.
Erasing ease/speed. Copy ease/speed. Dimensional accuracy. Data extraction.
I ran into a guy like that at my first job. I thought his drawings look like heck because he used a soft lead with a broad point. The sheets were all gray with graphite smear.
But, they printed just fine on a diazo paper (ammonia process) and if he ever made a revision, erasing was easy and all that clean white space really made the revisions stand out.
I will always remember remodel jobs where we drew the existing stuff in reverse on the back side of the vellum and the new stuff on the front.
I knew one other guy who would just stare at a blank drawing for about an hour making a dot on the paper every so often. Then you would look over at him an hour later and the page was nearly full. Some sort of Zen Master Draftsman.
Create a CAD drawing and plot it to graphite and make it look hand- drawn? *Cool*. Get it to plot various lines and areas in various pencil-lead weights and soft/hardnesses? I should enquire if there might be a service like that in town.
I'd be kind of self-conscious at first to have a bunch of people looking over my shoulder.
...But then I'd get used to it and would want to chat and do things to make it interesting and stuff... I'd eventually get around to asking one of them to order pizza and drinks for everyone; get the other architects and drafters in the office to all push their tables together and have an all-out drafting party with embarrassing tunes!
Clients might wonder, though, why there were so many greasy, cheesy details on their buildings, while other areas that looked kind of crusty, or like pepperoni or green pepper...
Work in a firm that mainly does schools. I draft, do presentations or anything to do with photchop, do all the IT work, and a tiny bit of design when a bone is thrown at me :).
Sketchup does little fuzzy lines if you so choose in order to provide that "hand-drawn" look. Of course it's not perfect but nothing Photoshop can't fix.
HomeOwnersHub website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here.
All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.