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Bezig met laden... Freehand Drawing and Discovery: Urban Sketching and Concept Drawing for Designers (editie 2013)door James Richards
Informatie over het werkFreehand Drawing and Discovery: Urban Sketching and Concept Drawing for Designers door James Richards
Books Read in 2013 (276) Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. I've read a decent amount on urban sketching and drawing your life, but this book is from the perspective of architecture and landscape design. I skipped the last chapter on digital drawing, but the rest was interesting, if not quite what I was looking for. Lessons on perspective and the color wheel aren't really my thing. I'm definitely a drawing-your-life kind of person, with little interest in design. That said, I could see it being useful for someone interested in design, even if I have no idea how much new ground it actually covers. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Features access to video tutorials!Designed to help architects, planners, and landscape architects use freehand sketching to quickly and creatively generate design concepts, Freehand Drawing and Discovery uses an array of cross-disciplinary examples to help readers develop their drawing skills. Taking a ""both/and"" approach, this book provides step-by-step guidance on drawing tools and techniques and offers practical suggestions on how to use these skills in conjunction with digital tools on real-world projects. Illustrated with nearly 300 full color drawings, the Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)720.28The arts Architecture Architecture - modified standard subdivisions MiscellanyLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Something of one’s persona always emerges in a sketch. Your sketches won’t look like mine, or mine like yours. That’s beautiful. A great sketch is an unselfconscious fusion of pen and place and personality. It will have its own unique creative energy, reflective of its subject and its maker. And if you don’t draw it, that unique expression won’t be voiced. Seeing sketching as a window into one’s personal creativity underscores its value in an age when digital tools so thoroughly dominate design education. I was recently asked in an interview for a Turkish magazine whether ‘crayons or computers’ were the essential tool for design students. I responded that the essential tools were openness, imagination, and the creative impulse. Then, the question becomes, how does one nurture and develop creative capacity? At the beginning of the creative process, one needs to be able to generate a lot of ideas quickly, and to be able to record and communicate a flow of ideas as they occur. Spontaneous freehand sketching remains the most efficient and effective way to do that. Very soon afterward, it’s critical to be able to quickly explore various aspects of concepts in three dimensions and in increasingly greater levels of detail.”
In "Freehand Drawing and Discovery: Urban Sketching and Concept Drawing for Designers" by James Richards
One of the tutors from my second sketching class, and the one that influenced me the most on a technical level.
Some of stuff I sketched during the above-mentioned class:
https://manuelaantao.blogspot.com/2020/03/freehand-drawing-and-discovery-urban.h... ( )