Paperback
240 illustrations
208 pages
280 x 216 mm
ISBN 978 1 85669 679 1
$35.00
Published September 2010
Contents
Introduction:
About this book
Media:
Introduction
Line
Render
Mixed media
Types:
Introduction
Sketches
Plans
Sections and elevations
Axonometric projections
Perspectives
Scripted drawings
Places:
Introduction
Interiors
Landscapes
Urban settings
Scripted drawings and urban design
Glossary
Further reading
Index
Picture credits and acknowledgements
Reviews Post Comments Books by the same author Inspection Copy Available
While computers have facilitated and enriched the ways in which architects can develop and present their ideas, there is also a growing lack of skills in other forms of image-making that was traditionally furnished through training in drawing and sketching. This book focuses on the exciting possibilities for representing the built environment with all the techniques – both ancient and modern – that are now available.
Students today need to learn the following skills: how to draw using a range of media, the basic rules of making effective spatial images, how to read a drawing, and how to express ideas through appropriate media and forms of communication. Following a brief introduction, the book is divided into three sections: Media, Types and Places. Each section is illustrated with key drawings and accompanying commentaries. Step-by-step sequences and special tips will further help students to make the most of their newly acquired skills. This book will be an indispensable practical and inspirational resource in architectural schools and practices alike.
David Dernie is a practising architect and Head of the Leicester School of Architecture at De Montfort University. His previous books include 'New Stone Architecture' (Laurence King, 2003) and 'Exhibition Design' (Laurence King, 2006).
This title is available as an e-book from the following providers:
CourseSmart (available in the US only)
'This is both a book and a manual to inspire drawing thinking and the creative emancipation that drawing offers.'
Eric Parry, Eric Parry Architects
'This book is about the art of the architect and should be a companion to every student of architecture.'
Professor Neil Jackson, University of Liverpool
'In the age of digital media, David Dernie offers us a refreshing and inspirational look into the wider scope of architectural drawing techniques beyond computer graphics. His handbook is a comprehensive and practical guide for architectural students and young professionals, who want to expand their repertoire of drawing tools, and weave digital and analog graphics to produce exceptional architectural representations.'
Imdat As, ZNA Architects
Exhibition Design
An insight into how contemporary exhibition design is fast changing, making use of technologies and techniques more commonly associated with film and retail.
Stone Architecture
Stone Architecture explores the special role of this material in a timely reassessment of the ideas which underpin today's renaissance of stone architecture.
Exciting resource
11/04/2011
For the discipline and practice of architecture, drawing is most potent when it seeks discoveries beyond documentation. Architectural drawing is not a means to an end but an autonomous practice and process of thinking, making and invention.
by Sneha Patel, Temple University
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