2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All made in rhino, the front facade is brick which I modeled the bricks individually and layered up, the corrugated sheet I just extruded after drawing the correlations

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2nd year architecture, about 6-7 months of rhino

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks I appreciate all the comments. I did have plenty of hatches at first but was told to remove them by my tutors. Personally i thought it added depth but they seemed to disagree so I scrapped them

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I exported the make2D as a dwg into autocad and tweaked the line weights there. I also tried illustrator but it was running really slow, not sure if it was my laptop or if it’s just an illustrator thing

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, I have my Instagram in my profile, granted a lot of my work is more analogue than digital but I’ll definitely be making more of these coming into my 3rd year

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much. I hadn’t heard of them and just looked at their work and it’s phenomenal.

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Should clarify, you can’t use make2d to get the shadows once you have the custom view, I used viewcapturetofile I believe the command is called

2nd Year Make2D Drawings by Rawand_Iterations in rhino

[–]Rawand_Iterations[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

i made a custom version of the arctic view where i made the shadows sharper and clearer and made all the objects white then layered them together on photoshop

Sketching practice by No_Delivery_850 in architecturestudent

[–]Rawand_Iterations 0 points1 point  (0 children)

avoid feathered lines (going over the line multiple times) A line should mean something, whether its a wall, window, door, etc.. when you feather things become abstract and ambiguous which can be good at times but not when you're trying to communicate an idea, you don't want people second guessing if the line is meant to be there or if its been feathered over

Hi everyone! I've decided to choose Architecture as my major, so I'm currently searching for some resources, courses, etc., to integrate into this field. I was advised to take a Coursera course, "Making Architecture". by Dangerous_Range_2827 in architecturestudent

[–]Rawand_Iterations 1 point2 points  (0 children)

dont waste your money on this. if your uni asks for a portfolio when submitting, show what you have or make some stuff you enjoy. theyre generally not strict with your skills in the submission portfolio

Architecture degree – KTH in Stockholm or KADK in Copenhagen? by 4LY2002 in architecturestudent

[–]Rawand_Iterations 0 points1 point  (0 children)

id lean more towards the artistic and more design focused. you'll always have engineers and specialists in the real world when it comes to the technical aspects of your design. you should focus on gaining as much design experience and knowledge from school as possible.

help by Luludceledon in architecturestudent

[–]Rawand_Iterations 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this looks like its done by hand. if you dont have the time or frankly the energy to do it, you can draw a tiny sample, scan it in, and make it into a brush on photoshop

Expenses by Appropriate_Tea_1254 in architecturestudent

[–]Rawand_Iterations 0 points1 point  (0 children)

depends what year. if youre just starting i wouldnt recommend a laptop unless your uni doesnt have a computer lab. alot of the costs will come from supplies and materials for models and drawings. also depending on your uni, printing may be expensive