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B. Entourage & Details
- People, Vegetation, Cars, Furniture
- Details - Wood, Glass, Water, Stone, Brick, Windows, Miscellaneous
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C. Rendering Types and Techinques
- Pencil and Colored Pencil
- Ink
- Marker
- Watercolor, Pastel and Art Stick
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E. Design Process and Six Approaches
- Establishing a program
- Setting up bubble diagrams
- Conducting a site analysis
- Choose from 6 design approaches
- Learn 23 design principles
- Present your design solutions
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What Should I Bring to the
One Week Workshop?
LIST OF ART MATERIALS
The materials listed below are also available in the workshop
bookstore for a very reasonable price. For correct materials
selection and convenience, you are encouraged to purchase them
upon arrival.
PENCIL: #2, and 6B.
INK: Sharpie Pen and fine
point felt tip pen.
COLORED PENCIL: At least
24 or more in assorted colors (Recommended: Prismacolor Thick
Lead Art Pencils brand, including Canary Yellow, Apple Green,
Olive Green, True Blue, Parma Violet, Poppy Red, Orange, Light
Umber and Black).
MARKER: By Chartpak, at least
36 in assorted colors (with lighter and earthy tone value);
Marker paper by Borden Riley (100S).
W ATERCOLOR: Watercolor set, watercolor paper and brushes in
#8 round and 3/4” flat.
OTHERS ITEMS: Triangles,
12-inch parallel ruler, rolls of yellow or white tracing paper
in 12" and 24" long, 300 sheets of Xerox paper, engineer
scale, circle template, two point perspective charts, battery
operated pencil sharpener, POST-IT note pad (3"x3"
or smaller), drafting tape, coffee mug, your favorite music
in cassette or CD and graphic and rendering books (see reference
list below). Summer sessions: bring your swimming suits.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The above
materials are also available in the workshop for very competitive
prices. For correct selection of materials and convenience,
you are encouraged to purchase them upon arrival.
REFERENCE TEXTS:
Please bring what you have as shown below.
Most books are also available for purchase at the workshop bookstore
for 10 to 20% off the list price.
* Required textbook for the workshop
** Strongly recommended
ENTOURAGE:
Burden, Ernest. Entourage: A Tracing File for
Architecture and Interior Design Drawing. McGraw-Hill, 3rd ed.
1996.
Evans, LarryThe New Complete Illustration
Guide. John Wiley & Sons, 2nd ed. 1997.
PLAN,
SECTION, ELEVATION:
Walker, Theodore D. Plan Graphics. John Wiley
& Sons, 2nd ed. 1990.
Wang, Thomas C. Plan and Section Drawing. John
Wiley & Sons, 2nd ed. 1997.
RENDERING
TECHNIQUES:
Calle, Paul. The Pencil. Writers Digest Books,
1985.
Doyle, Michael E. Color Drawing: A Marker-Colored-Pencil
Approach. John Wiley & Sons, Rev. ed. , 1997
Drpic, Ivo. Sketching and Rendering Interior
Spaces. Whitney Library of Design. 1988.
Edwards, Betty. Drawing on the Right Side of
the Brain. J P Tarcher, 1989.
Hanna, Robert. A Nebraska Portfolio. University
of Nebraska Press, 1992.
Leggitt, Jim. Drawing Shortcuts: Developing
Quick Drawing Skills Using Today's Technology. John Wiley &
Sons, 2002.
*Lin, Mike. Drawing
and Designing with Confidence:A Step-by-Step Guide. John
Wiley & Sons, 1997.
Linton, Harold and Roy Strickfaden. Architectural
Sketching in Markers. John Wiley & Sons, 1997.
McGarry, Richard. Marker Magic: The Rendering
Problem Solver for Designers, John Wiley & Sons, 1997.
Reid, Grant. Landscape Graphics. Whitney Library
of Design, 1987
Reid, Grant. From Concept to Form in Landscape
Design . John Wiley & Sons, 1997.
Wang, Thomas C. Pencil Sketching. John Wiley
& Sons, 2002.
Wang, Thomas C. Sketching with Markers. 2nd
ed. New York: VNR
Wu, Kingsley. Freehand Sketching in the Architectural
Environment. John Wiley & Sons, 1997
RENDERING
EXAMPLES
*Lin, Mike. Architectural
Rendering Techniques:A Color Reference. John Wiley &
Sons, 1985.
**Walker, Theodore D. Perspective Sketches.
John Wiley & Sons, 5th ed. 1997. |