An elevation drawing is a one dimensional (flat) execution of a portion of a floor plan or architectural rendering of a house plan. It is seen 'head on' or as if you were facing the particular wall or home from the front.
Elevations depict a side view of a structure or other mass. A plan view looks straight down and is sometimes called a bird's-eye view.
Orthographic grid paper is grid paper that allows for isometric drawings. This allows for 3 dimensional drawings, and is common for drawing construction diagrams, as-builts and such. For example, you could use this to account length, width, and elevation.
LS drawings are Light Sketch drawings preferred by a pencil or thin charcoal.
a type of drawings are detailed threads, and complementary threas
Working drawings are usually drafts used in construction or design. Detail drawings are drafts done that highlight or enlarge a smaller part of a component.
In blueprinting the two large categories of drawings are plan and elevation view.
It is just where the elevation is positioned, first angle, the drawings is positioned to the right of the section and third, the elevation is positioned to the left of the section, obviously rotated the correct way too.
orthographic
TERRAIN
TERRAIN
Elevations depict a side view of a structure or other mass. A plan view looks straight down and is sometimes called a bird's-eye view.
Orthographic grid paper is grid paper that allows for isometric drawings. This allows for 3 dimensional drawings, and is common for drawing construction diagrams, as-builts and such. For example, you could use this to account length, width, and elevation.
Compas, title of map, scale, legend
h
Elevation
An elevation view is a two-dimensional representation of a building or object that shows one side of it as if you were looking at it from directly in front or from the side. It helps to illustrate the height, width, and depth of the structure, and is commonly used in architectural drawings and design.
Invert elevations can usually be found directly on as-built drawings of the sewer facility. The simplest way to calculate an invert elevation of a manhole is to measure the depth of the manhole from the surface to the pipe invert. The invert elevation equals the ground or rim elevation minus this depth. If you do not know the rim elevation or invert elevation, a surveyor must measure the invert and/or rim elevation with reference to a nearby elevation benchmark (see: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Elevation_Benchmark.jpg). Also, upstream and downstream invert elevations in a manhole typically differ by about 0.1 feet.