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Technical Illustration is the use of illustration to visually communicate information of a technical nature. Technical illustrations can be component drawings or diagrams.
Today, technical illustration can be broken down into three categories.
- For specialized engineering or scientific communication: The first category is technical illustration used by engineers/scientists to communicate with their peers and in specifications. This use of technical illustration has its own complex terminology and specialized symbols; examples are the fields of atomic energy, aerospace and military/defense. These areas can be further broken down into disciplines of mechanical, electrical, architectural engineering and many more.
- For communication with other highly skilled experts: The second category is technical illustration used by engineers to communicate with people who are highly skilled in a field, but who are not engineers. Examples of this type of technical illustration are illustrations found in user/operator documentation. These illustrations can be very complex and have jargon and symbols not understood by the general public, such as illustrations that are part of instructional materials for operating CNC machinery.
- For communication with the general public: The third category is technical illustration that informs the general public, for example illustrated instructions found in the manuals for automobiles and consumer electronics. This type of technical illustration contains simple terminology and symbols that can be understood by the lay person and is sometimes called creative technical illustration/graphics.
Technical illustration uses several basic mechanical drawing configurations called axonometric projection. These are:
Technical illustration and computer-aided design can also use 3D and solidbody projections.
Technical illustration in 3D allows to combine aesthetics of the images with technical preciseness. One of the world's biggest cruise ship renderings was created in collaboration with the yard and designer teams and truthfully reflects every minutest detail (Celebrity Solstice by Celebrity Cruises, 3D visualisation by Vayersoft). At the same time it's photorealistic look and appeal allows for the usage in marketing (printing, web, etc.)
Illustrations used to be hand-drawn but in 1962 computer engineers created a method to draw both straight and curved lines using computers. This resulted in rapid advances in both computers and software and this allowed people to create even very complex technical illustrations on a computer.
[edit] See also
IsoDraw!
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