thank you! i dont why but in school, they trained us to generate our plan, section, etc. lines from Rhino model, and then bring those lines into adobe illustrator and edit lineweights & hatches in there. I really wish they would have show us this way as it is way less time consuming and I just love & really prefer working in the Rhino. thanks again
To make your workflow complete shit. If you have to open illustrator you are wasting your time. The less tools you have to use to accomplish a task the better. The people who used illustrator were always the ones that had to pull “all nighters”. Multiple days in a row.
@@aethelwolfe3539 that’s really the truth - you are absolutely right! That was my reality unfortunately as I hadn’t figured out yet there was an easier way
Hi Limor, to make a hatch just create a closed curve you would like to fill and then type in 'hatch' to fill this with a hatch. I then just make sure I put these hatches all on thier own layer
Hi Jan, i've made a couple of other videos on page setup and annotation style creation that may answer this question. You can find the series here ruclips.net/video/T9FUGLikg2U/видео.html
Hey. If the scale of drawings was done in the scale 1/100 on which number I need to multiply your thickness of the line which you showed on the video? Like in your case the structure was done 0.7 what would the same structure in the scale 1/100? Is there any principle in this topic depending on the scale of drawings? As far as I know Rhino doesn’t scale the thickness of the lines automatically. Thanks for video!
Hi Ana, I actually wouldn't change these line weights if I was working at a different scale. Any thicker than a 0.7mm - 1mm will look very bulky in the drawing. The only thing I would consider is maybe making the structure line weight slightly thinner, ie 0.5mm for a 1:100 to make sure the lines for the structure do not merge into one another (as discussed with the plasterboard in this video)
Hi Sasha, probably the best way is to make a template file with these layers. Then every time you start a new project, open this template file and do a 'save as' so your new projects are always set up in the same way
thank you! i dont why but in school, they trained us to generate our plan, section, etc. lines from Rhino model, and then bring those lines into adobe illustrator and edit lineweights & hatches in there. I really wish they would have show us this way as it is way less time consuming and I just love & really prefer working in the Rhino. thanks again
Thanks, gkad they were useful!
To make your workflow complete shit. If you have to open illustrator you are wasting your time. The less tools you have to use to accomplish a task the better. The people who used illustrator were always the ones that had to pull “all nighters”. Multiple days in a row.
That’s the reason I abandon Rhinocad in favour of Revit. I never pulled an all nighter, mostly because I could not because of sleeping disorder.
@@aethelwolfe3539 that’s really the truth - you are absolutely right! That was my reality unfortunately as I hadn’t figured out yet there was an easier way
lol im those people and its my last time using illustrator
@@aethelwolfe3539
Tom Budd you're a savior! I love your videos and teaching technique, so so helpful, thank you so much
Thanks Mirna, glad it was useful!
Thank you so much, it's great learning a system to prepare drawings efficiently on rhino! Thank you again!
Thanks for watching Sasha, im glad they were helpful
Pasé mucho tiempo buscando éste vídeo, muchas gracias me ha sido de gran apoyo.
Well done.
That was cool , really helped me alot thx mann
Hey Tom, I'm just wondering how you actually create a hatch layer? Thanks so much
Hi Limor, to make a hatch just create a closed curve you would like to fill and then type in 'hatch' to fill this with a hatch. I then just make sure I put these hatches all on thier own layer
Great video! How do I set up a page style like your 'page_drawing_1:50'?
Hi Jan, i've made a couple of other videos on page setup and annotation style creation that may answer this question. You can find the series here ruclips.net/video/T9FUGLikg2U/видео.html
@@tombudd15 lovely!!
Hello can i use the SAME layers for sections elevations too?
Hey. If the scale of drawings was done in the scale 1/100 on which number I need to multiply your thickness of the line which you showed on the video? Like in your case the structure was done 0.7 what would the same structure in the scale 1/100? Is there any principle in this topic depending on the scale of drawings? As far as I know Rhino doesn’t scale the thickness of the lines automatically. Thanks for video!
Hi Ana, I actually wouldn't change these line weights if I was working at a different scale. Any thicker than a 0.7mm - 1mm will look very bulky in the drawing. The only thing I would consider is maybe making the structure line weight slightly thinner, ie 0.5mm for a 1:100 to make sure the lines for the structure do not merge into one another (as discussed with the plasterboard in this video)
Is there a way to copy these settings into another document, every time you load Rhino?
Hi Sasha, probably the best way is to make a template file with these layers. Then every time you start a new project, open this template file and do a 'save as' so your new projects are always set up in the same way
You should use one of the standardized cad styles and layers.