Accuracy In
Architectural Model Making
Is Not
Always Found In
3D Design Software
Accuracy in architectural model making most certainly
requires the use of tactile and physical materials. A
scale model is meant to represent a precise, but smaller
construction of the intended design. This is the
traditional way of presenting an architectural idea for
financial backing.
In sales presentations people what to see a realistic
interpretation of what they are investing in. Certain
visual aspects of a project can only be revealed when
incorporating such aspects as texture and coloration. As
architecture is and remains an art form, appealing to
the senses of potential backers in the most effective
way is guaranteed to get the better results.
3D software has certain admitted features that physical
models do not. Incorporating pertinent data into the
presentation of a physical model requires that there be
a secondary report. Models designed by using this
cutting edge software can bring to light valuable data
within the same presentation.
Software generated models involve far less concern
regarding the use of delicate materials. Lighting
effects are achieved without the hassle that is known to
be a part of the physical model making process.
Ultimately these can be cheaper, in a way, less subject
to damage, and easier to construct.
It is accuracy however that they lack. Accuracy when
using 3D architectural models is lacking in a major way.
First, 3D software can never truly display a three
dimensional re-creation of any project. The resulting
image has been and will always be two dimensional.
In general it is intended that architectural models be
the focus or meeting point within the design process.
Numerous designers of different trades can come together
with their various problems and solutions at the model
design table. Lacking this process, there remains little
room for accuracy in architectural model making when
individuals of different trades cannot come together for
the combination of their different tasks.
Do
You Know How To Present Your
Architectural Design By
Colors?
To understand the strength of the colors and their
effects on the design is very vital to know how to
present your architectural design by colors. But the
process of understanding is not that easy to grasp as it
takes time. Let us see ahead how to do it.
If you know the top secret where and what to put, you
are just the master of the art. So many structures
involved in the architectural design as a whole has each
to be given an individual identity of color which should
be impressive when seen as a whole.
Somebody who is a professional well trained design
engineer or architect can alone know the right
combination as he had already dealt with so many similar
cases. He could tell you faster and minimize your time
spent.
But it is really strange to note that even professional
finds this task a really difficult challenge which needs
a lot of concentration and enough studies to tell on how
to present your architectural design by colors. When you
seek a computer to look into the possible outputs you
will be successful easily.
Even when your design is of no worth sometimes the color
combination alone gets you the nice feel and makes it to
win appreciation from the visitors. The vice versa is
also true.
There is lot of instances to quote where normally in
dense towns and cities where appreciation and attention
is given altogether mainly for the color combination
alone forgetting about the design. The converse happens
in art galleries
When you done something really astonishing and
innovative enough then such a design should at no cost
is dominated by flimsy colors which would diminish
appreciation for your design. Simply saying on the whole
if you are well versed in the color combinations your
resourceful in your trade.
Architecture Quotes
"A
doctor can bury his mistakes but an architect can only
advise his client to plant vines."
Frank Lloyd Wright
"Without freedom, no art; art lives only on the
restraints it imposes on itself, and dies of all
others."
Albert Camus
"In order to create there must be a dynamic force, and
what force is more potent than love?"
Igor Stravinsky
"Colour does not add a pleasant quality to design - it
reinforces it."
Pierre Bonnard
"All architecture is shelter, all great architecture is
the design of space that contains, cuddles, exalts, or
stimulates the persons in that space."
Philip Johnson
"Architects are pretty much high-class whores. We can
turn down projects the way they can turn down some
clients, but we've both got to say yes to someone if we
want to stay in business."
Philip Johnson
"Architecture is the art of how to waste space."
Philip Johnson quotes
"There is always a heavy demand for fresh mediocrity. In
every generation the least cultivated taste has the
largest appetite."
Paul Gauguin
"Architecture, of all the arts, is the one which acts
the most slowly, but the most surely, on the soul"
Ernest Dimnet
"A great architect is not made by way of a brain nearly
so much as he is made by way of a cultivated, enriched
heart."
Frank Lloyd Wright
"The artist must create a spark before he can make a
fire and before art is born, the artist must be ready to
be consumed by the fire of his own creation."
Auguste Rodin
"If you have anything really valuable to contribute to
the world it will come through the expression of your
own personality, that single spark of divinity that sets
you off and makes you different from every other living
creature."
Bruce Barton
"In design sometimes one plus one equals three."
Josef Albers
"Design depends largely on constraints."
Charles Eames
"The distance between insanity and genius is measured
only by success."
Bruce Feirstein
The details are not the details. They make the design. -
Charles Eames
"Design must seduce, shape, and perhaps more
importantly, evoke emotional response."
April Greiman.
However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally
look at the results. -
Winston Churchill
"When I am working on a problem I never think about
beauty. I only think about how to solve the problem. But
when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful,
I know it is wrong."
Buckminster Fuller.
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