05/14/2026
The first drawing sets that I ever produced were done by hand on vellum, and then turned into “blueprints” by painstakingly placing them over ammonium ferric citrate and potassium ferricyanide coated sheets that turned blue when exposed to light. I still remember the smell of them!
Computer drafting software like AutoCAD, though, very quickly replaced those wonderful hand drawings. And rightfully so! I’d seemingly get sucked into the computer when I was on AutoCAD! It was so much faster… especially for changes! Running AutoCAD, I could just watch the screen, while my fingers feverishly tapped away. Keyboard commands committed to muscle memory, as I brought designs to life in 2d and later in 3d.
Computer software has obviously greatly improved our ability to accurately annotate and detail our projects. Because of it, we can share incredible amounts of information with the highly skilled build teams on our projects. These days Revit, and other go-to software, makes collaboration with engineers and other consultants much more manageable. And, in many cases, today our clients are even able to see photo-realistic 3d renderings or have virtual walk-thru’s of their homes well ahead of construction. Which is so fun! These software programs are a critical, indispensable tool in architecture!
That said, there is just something almost romantic about hand drawing! I’ve never abandoned the practice; virtually all my designs still start that way. Although I admit that SOME of my hand drawings are now done on an iPad Pro. Gasp! Whether using Morpholio on my tablet, or having my favorite Staedtler pens in hand on tracing paper taped to my nearly 30-year-old vinyl-covered drafting table… I absolutely love sketching out ideas that used to just be in my mind. Ideas seem to flow from my brain to paper just a little more easily with a pen in hand. And spending a sublime session sitting at that nearly worn-out, well-loved, oversized drafting table just kind of relaxes me somehow. Honestly, everyone should have one in their lives!