befehr Posted October 3, 2018 Share Posted October 3, 2018 Technical illustration of a carburetor from a small Subaru engine. The pressure profile for stroke widths makes thick/thin transitions easy. GarryP, VectorWhiz, Wosven and 6 others 8 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mithferion Posted October 4, 2018 Share Posted October 4, 2018 Nice! It must be an obvious answer, but I believe you relied on the Gris and Axis feature for this, am I right? Best regards! Quote AMD FX 8350 :: Radeon HD 5670 :: Windows 10 :: http://mithferion.deviantart.com/ Oxygen Icons :: GCP Icons :: iOS 11 Design Resources :: iOS App Icon Template :: Free Quality Fonts (Commercial Use) :: Public Domain Images How to do High Quality Art :: Mesh Warp / Distort Tool Considerations :: Select Same / Object - Suggestions :: Live Glassmorphism Effect Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
befehr Posted October 4, 2018 Author Share Posted October 4, 2018 2 minutes ago, Mithferion said: It must be an obvious answer, but I believe you relied on the Gris and Axis feature for this, am I right? Thanks Mithferion. Actually, I mostly eye balled it. I took a photo of the flat face (on the left side), foreshortened and skewed that then built everything off of that. Once I find the proper foreshortening proportions and basic objects, like ellipses, for each axis I just copy/paste down each axis. Example is the bottom of the carb, the o-rings, float, boat, bolt and threads. If I had used Grid and Axis manager things would have gone a lot quicker, but I wanted to challenge myself. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
retrograde Posted October 4, 2018 Share Posted October 4, 2018 Nice job on this. I've tackled this kind of thing many times in illustrator but never in Designer. Quote http://www.kevincreative.com https://www.behance.net/kevincreative https://dribbble.com/kevincreative https://www.instagram.com/kevincreative/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GarryP Posted October 4, 2018 Share Posted October 4, 2018 Very nice work. If I remember my old Haynes manuals correctly "re-assembly is the reverse of disassembly". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mithferion Posted October 4, 2018 Share Posted October 4, 2018 10 hours ago, befehr said: Thanks Mithferion. Actually, I mostly eye balled it. I took a photo of the flat face (on the left side), foreshortened and skewed that then built everything off of that. Once I find the proper foreshortening proportions and basic objects, like ellipses, for each axis I just copy/paste down each axis. Example is the bottom of the carb, the o-rings, float, boat, bolt and threads. If I had used Grid and Axis manager things would have gone a lot quicker, but I wanted to challenge myself. That's and interesting approach. But the good thing is that you challenged yourself and the result was great. Best regards! Quote AMD FX 8350 :: Radeon HD 5670 :: Windows 10 :: http://mithferion.deviantart.com/ Oxygen Icons :: GCP Icons :: iOS 11 Design Resources :: iOS App Icon Template :: Free Quality Fonts (Commercial Use) :: Public Domain Images How to do High Quality Art :: Mesh Warp / Distort Tool Considerations :: Select Same / Object - Suggestions :: Live Glassmorphism Effect Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
befehr Posted October 4, 2018 Author Share Posted October 4, 2018 4 hours ago, GarryP said: If I remember my old Haynes manuals correctly "re-assembly is the reverse of disassembly". lol, right. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VectorWhiz Posted October 13, 2018 Share Posted October 13, 2018 Great clean drawing. The line thickness variation is effective and applied purposefully. Perspective is correct. Kudos! befehr 1 Quote Home: https://vectorwhiz.com : : : : Portfolio blog: https://communicats.blogspot.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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