Remove Finishes Remove Information Remove Sketching Remove Technique
article thumbnail

Architectural Sketching [or How to Sketch like Bob] | Life of an Architect

Life of an Architect

Home / Graphics / Architectural Sketching or How to Sketch like Me Architectural Sketching or How to Sketch like Me Bob Borson — April 7, 2014 — 70 Comments Architectural sketching is becoming a thing of the past – at least that’s how it seems to me most days.

Sketching 111
article thumbnail

7 Top AI Tools for Architectural Rendering and Visualization

Architizer

During the Renaissance, Italian architects such as Leon Batista Alberti, Filippo Brunelleschi and Donato Bramante used axonometric sketches and carefully hand-drawn perspectives to communicate their designs. has the ability to convert it into numerous visualization styles: from day to night shots and from sketches to realistic imagery.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Eight restful bedrooms decorated in the colours of autumn leaves

Deezen

Photo by David Zarzoso La Casa de los Olivos, Spain, by Balzar Arquitectos Spanish studio Balzar Arquitectos designed a copper-toned home in rural Valencia with an interior colour palette informed by the colours of the surrounding landscape. Timber ceilings were stained a dark red hue, while the walls were stained a lighter yellow tone.

Sketching 121
article thumbnail

Seasonal shifts and the changes it brings: TSAR Carpets’ latest collection embraces the passage of time

Habitus Living

In the morning after, Aitken sketched a series of ephemeral graphic patterns that lived on her drawing board for years until the partnership with TSAR Carpets provided the opportunity to turn her dreams into reality. For more information, visit the collection here or contact your local studio. . TSAR Carpets tsarcarpets.com.

article thumbnail

Six homeware products designed by students

Deezen

Dezeen School Shows: we've picked six homeware design projects featured on Dezeen School Shows that aim to enhance interiors by combining contemporary and traditional techniques. This roundup includes a 3D-printed vase "made with sound" that aims to celebrate Toronto's Chinatown and a rug informed by Jurassic coastal landscapes.

article thumbnail

Bruce Slorach puts a microscope on native Australian flora

Habitus Living

His multi-media works are informed by textile and decorative arts traditions that date back to the 16th century. His use of fibre, stitch, print, and mixed media techniques breathe new life into traditional textile methods, in a celebration of Australian nature through texture, light, colour, and form.

article thumbnail

PURE NFTEA Tea House, Shenzhen, China

e-architect

It incorporates three ancient paintings, namely, “Shanglin Park”, “Huishan Tea Party” and “Tea Extraction”, and has been edited to combine both modern ideology and traditional copper plate printing techniques. The red finishes replicate the weathered fracture surface of the soil visually and tactilely.

Housing 57