Week One What is Drafting Objective This chapter
Week One What is Drafting?
Objective • This chapter discusses what drafting is and why it is used by interior designers
Introduction • Graphic communication • The art of putting ideas to paper in picture form to create instructions • Universally recognized symbols and protocols enable all to interpret the drawings in a consistent manner
History of Drafting • Originated when the first designer needed to give instructions • Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans sketched elaborate structures onto papyrus • Modern board drafting have been largely unchanged for the past 200 years • Early 1980 s: computer-aided drafting (CAD) software replaced board drafting
How Drafting is Used in Residential Design • • Lay out a floor plan Design an electrical plan Describe Elevations, Sections, and Details Show a furniture arrangement Custom-design kitchen cabinetry Describe a window treatment Show specifics, such as sizes, locations, and features
Types of Drawings • Presentation drawings – General purpose drawings • Production drawings – Contract documents – Construction or working drawings • Shop drawings – Fabrication or millwork drawing
Presentation Drawings • Show drawings • Used to sell ideas to clients or as exhibits – Understood by layperson – Consist of: • • Floor plans Interior elevations Perspective drawings Fabric swatches and material samples
Production Drawings • Aimed at tradespeople who will implement the ideas • Technical and highly detailed • Descriptive drawings such as details, sections, and elevations • More technical than presentation drawings • Complex dimensioning • Instructions for building
Shop Drawings • More detailed than a production drawing • Done by the person who will be doing the actual work • Shows the designer precisely how the ideas in the production drawings will be implemented
Specifications • Written instructions • Complement the drawings • Describe the quality of the materials that the drawings show • Contain details that would clutter up drawings • Presented in a separate document
2 -D vs. 3 -D • The floor plan is a two-dimensional drawing: length and width • An interior perspective is a threedimensional drawing – Presentation – Closest to how the space is actually seen – Easily understood by client • 2 -D drawings: used for production • 3 -D drawings: used for presentation
Why Draft on Boards? • Drafting is all about problem solving • Easiest for most beginning students to problem solve learning a new software • Board thinking and problem solving skills will always be valuable • One must know how to construct a floor plan and create an elevation
Importance of Legible Drawings • Graphic instructions are carefully drafted to industry standards • Clear, legible drawings with carefully lettered notes will reduce the chances of misinterpretation • Drafted documents are legally binding
What Does “Standard” Mean? • The dictionary defines “standard” as something established by authority, custom, or general consent as a model or example
Summary • Drafting uses analytic thinking and drawing to explain ideas • Graphic instructions are tailored to different audiences • Standardized ways of presenting information have evolved to make drawings readable no matter where they are created or read
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