Design and sketching workshop

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Design and Sketching Workshop-Part 1 Styling Team Designers KMC, Escorts Limited Arun M, Rakesh Kumar Das, Rohit Raghuvanshi

Transcript of Design and sketching workshop

Page 1: Design and sketching workshop

Design and Sketching Workshop-Part 1

Styling Team DesignersKMC, Escorts Limited

Arun M, Rakesh Kumar Das, Rohit Raghuvanshi

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“Every child is an artist, the problem is how to remain an artist when they grow up”

– Pablo Picasso

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Lets play a small game!!! Close your eyes after seeing the image and try drawing it freely on a

sheet of paper with a pencil provided.

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What is a sketch...

The thing that you did on the piece of paper is called a “SKETCH”

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A sketch is a rapidly executed freehand drawing that is not usually intended as a finished work. 

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What is the difference between drawing and sketching...• Sketching is when you are quickly laying out your

artwork with a basic outlines of what you want and where you want it.

• Drawing is when you go into more detail such as adding those second marks on a watch. Practice a lot and you will become better at it.

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A Sketch A Drawing

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Drafting/Technical Sketching• Technical sketching is a freehand sketch.

• The only equipment required to execute technical sketches are soft pencils in the F to HB range, paper, and an eraser.

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Bravo!...They did it all!!

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Leonardo da VinciA painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist, and writer.

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Henry Dreyfuss• One of the celebrity industrial designers of the 1930s and

1940s, Dreyfuss dramatically improved the look, feel, and usability of dozens of consumer products.

• Dreyfuss was not a stylist: he applied common sense and a scientific approach to design problems.

• His work both popularized the field for public consumption, and made significant contributions to the underlying fields of ergonomics, anthropometrics, and human factors.

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John Deere Tractors designed by Henry Dreyfuss

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The Basics of Sketching

•Use a soft pencil, e.g. HB•Grasp the pencil between your fingers, about 20 mm from its tip.•Do not rest your hand on the paper while you draw (do free-hand drawing)•Hold the pencil at an angle so that you are able to see its point.•Be relaxed about what you are doing.

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Basic Tripod GripUnderhand Tripod Grip

Extended Tripod GripOverhand Grip

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Pencil Strokes

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Designer’s sketching secret!!!

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EXERCISES: PRACTISE SESSIONS

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"Practice makes a man perfect"

- Is it right?

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Step A: Draw a number of parallel lines, vertically, horizontally and diagonally. Try to focus on the point towards which you are drawing the lines, and keep your wrist from bending.

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Step B: Once you feel at ease with drawing parallel lines, you may start drawing horizontal and vertical lines to form right angles (90 degree angles).

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Step C: When you are able to draw these right angles confidently, you are ready for the next step: drawing squares. Squares and rectangles are commonly used to frame other objects that are sketched.

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Step D: If you have to draw a circle, it may be useful to sketch a square – lightly. The sides should be equal to the diameter of the circle that is required. By marking the centers of the four sides you will identify the points of contact of the circle..

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Step E: If you have to draw a circle, it may be useful to sketch a square – lightly. The sides should be equal to the diameter of the circle that is required. By marking the centers of the four sides you will identify the points of contact of the circle..

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Let’s play a game again...

BLIND SKETCHING TO FEEL THE PRODUCT

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Sketch product on the whiteboard; what you can feel is there inside the box.

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Keep sketching ...