Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Drawing and Line Weight

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Drawing and Line Weight"— Presentation transcript:

1 Drawing and Line Weight
U1-L4 September 9, 2010 Drawing and Line Weight DRILL Answer in a complete sentence: A general sketching and technical drawing rule is to begin ALL lines as very thin lines. Why would this be? During the drill, either collect the grid copying assignment or check it. I suggest collecting it so that you can take a look in detail and provide appropriate feedback. If the drill says “write in a complete sentence,” students should not write the question. If the drill does not say to write in a complete sentence, students should write the questions too. Answer – in case you make mistakes, to set your drawing up well, to really determine the best location for lines.

2 QUIZ Take out a blank sheet of notebook paper.
U1-L3 QUIZ Take out a blank sheet of notebook paper. LETTER a title at the bottom, LETTER the unit and day at the top. The name of this sheet is “QUIZ.” In the class notes space, answer the following questions (write just the answer): What are the consequences for coming to class late? What supplies must you have for this class? What is the penalty for turning in an assignment late? The correct note sheet format will also be graded on this quiz.

3 DRAWING Rules for drawing: Pull your pencil, don’t push it.
Use proper line weight Always start with LIGHT layout lines.

4 DRAWING Always pull your pencil, don’t push it.
Mark two points, then draw your pencil between them. Use horizontal lines to connect the dots in Exercise 1 on your worksheet Use LIGHT lines!

5 DRAWING The LIGHT lines you start with are called Construction Lines.
U1-L4 DRAWING The LIGHT lines you start with are called Construction Lines. ALL LINES should begin as Construction lines. Make sure students understand that ALL LINES BEGIN AS COSTRUCTION LINES. The purpose: in case you make a mistake, to get the right location, etc.

6 DRAWING Three line weights in this class:
U1-L4 DRAWING Three line weights in this class: Light: very thin, not noticeable from 2’ Medium: thin, noticeable from 2’ Heavy: thick, obvious from 2’ Complete Exercise 2 – draw thin, medium, and heavy lines. ALL LINES BEGIN AS CONSTRUCTION LINES! These three lineweights are important and students should know them. The thin lines should be BARELY visible – you should have to get close to the paper to see them.

7 U1-L4 GRID ENLARGEMENT Turn over your worksheet and complete the grid enlargement. USE ONLY CONSTRUCTION LINES

8 U1-L4 GRID ENLARGEMENT

9 U1-L4 Homework Complete the grid enlargement exercise. CONSTRUCTION LINES ONLY. Due Friday: Class notebook, Ruler and compass


Download ppt "Drawing and Line Weight"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google