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Develop the
creative potential of vector drawings through Illustrator
rendering. You may choose a precedent building or your own
design project as the subject.
1. Comment and
Prepare
Write comments about your classmates' Assignment
5.
Study examples to see how artists
and designers use simplification in representing forms &
spaces Find interesting approaches and color schemes to guide
you in developing your images
Become familiar with the
Illustrator interface through Lynda.com videos (Ch. 1 Concepts, Ch.
4 Basic Drawing) or similar tutorials. In particular, learn to
use - Direct Selection tool, Pen tool -
Appearance. Layer panels - Align / Distribute
panel. Pathmaker panel - Live Paint.
Gradient panel
2. Find Color
Moods
Working from Kuler or an image that inspires
you, create at least two sets of color swatches that appeal to
you. The palettes should have colors rough in different
proportions: two or three major color fields with strokes of
matching highlight colors. Use these experiments as a starting
point and adapt the colors to suit the rendering.
3.
Diagram
Create a set of six related diagrams
of a building using a consistent color palette and
lineweights. Consider how systems such as spatial order,
program organization, pedestrian circulation, construction sequence,
etc. can be simplified for clarity. Can you find the view which
reveals the most about each aspect? Which ideas are enhanced by the
abstraction of flat 2D graphics and which are best shown with 3D
forms?
- Create two (2) three-dimensional diagrams in Sketchup, exporting a
2D Graphic > PDF to Illustrator.
- Draw four (4) two-dimensional diagrams (plan or section)
directly in Illustrator.
Consider how you can map
essential information to shape, lineweight, linestyle, corner
articulation, color hue, saturation, brightness, to create the
clearest expression. Add quiet text labels where
essential. All should be legible as 200 x 200 pixel images.
These can be conceptual and do not have to be to scale.
Describe in 150 words how you used graphics to achieve your
intentions. Optionally include a reference image or
link to building source information.
4. Render a section or sectional perspective
You may cut an existing Sketchup model
such as Rudolph Schindler's Lovell Beach House or your own
model: Export a Section Slice as DWG, save 2D graphic .JPG of
shaded views). Alternatively, you can import and render a CAD
drawing or draw over a scanned image in Illustrator. The
resulting image must follow architectural graphic conventions, with
careful attention to lineweight.
Use the drawing
as a guide - duplicate its layer and lock one copy. Draw
shapes on new layers and experiment with colored fills, gradient
fills, and line weight to change the reading of the drawing.
Try simplifying with fewer, simpler shapes. Use layers for
easy selection and modification.
- Include figures (see the Oregon Entourage Project
), furnishings and/or vegetation, importing and tracing images as
needed. Watch the relationship of the horizon line and
the eyes of the figures; position objects in regards to the
overall composition.
- Generate variations by modifying color, transparency,
lighting, component size & placement. As you work, save the
Illustrator (.ai) file under incremental names: section1.ai,
section2.ai, etc.
5. Publish
After saving your
favorite color variations in Adobe Illustrator .AI format,
choose File > Export as .JPG (high quality)
files. Resize if necessary in Photoshop to no more than 600 x
800 pixels and post to your ePortfolio account along with a 150
word description of you process.
For the
Advanced:
- Create a matching plan for the section
that shows shadows of the cut walls. Present both
together in a poster.
- Develop a schematic model of your current
studio project that includes floor plates and major walls.
Cut a section and show daylighting, natural ventilation, passive
solar, etc.
- Use Layout to create Sketchup printouts to
scale.
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EVALUATION
CRITERIA:
Concept
- Substantive building chosen, diagram
subjects appropriate
- Section taken at a revealing point
- Text explains process and discoveries
Design Quality
- diagrams have consistent use of color and
graphic elements (i.e. similar lineweights & line types)
- Page and image compositions are
ordered and balanced, with clear hierarchy
- color schemes for sections portray contrasting
moods.
Technical Competence
- Lineweights follow architectural graphic
conventions
- Fill values reinforce spatial depth
- Experimentation with illustrator features
evident
Completeness
- Thoughtful comments written on partners'
pages.
- Scaling entourage incorporated
- Final images shown on a descriptive
webpage.
- Project submitted in a timely manner.
REFERENCES:
Technical
References: Sketchup: Cutting Plans & Sections Illustrator
- Univ. of Washington Landscape Architecture Intro
Tutorial Illustrator - for Urban
Planning: by Crystal Wilson, 2004: see tutorials 3,4 & 5
Illustrator - Live Paint fun : simple fills Illustrator -
Vectors from Images explains Live Trace settings in
detail
Diagramming
References 2D & 3D Diagrams Paul Laseau, Graphic
Thinking for Architects and Designers , Ch. 4 Abstraction NA2705
.L38 2001 Edward Tufte's Envisioning
Information : chapter on Small Multiples, QA90 .T914 1990
Frank Ching’s Architecture:
Form Space & Order : Ch 7 Principles |
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