![]() Trim the wood grain and copy the quadrants. Inside the first rectangle, trim or delete all the wood grain from the upper-right and lower-left quadrants. Inside the second rectangle, trim or delete all the wood grain from the upper-left and lower-right quadrants.Ĭopy the trimmed wood grain quadrants to their opposite quadrant in the new rectangle (E.G. Make any other changes you want to any of the interior vertices of the wood grain. If you knew someone with Vectorworks, you could have them export to CAD, and then import that CAD into Rhino (hopefully it works - best to import into a blank file and not a file that’s dear to you).The only rule is to never move any of the outer-edge endpoints. PAT files I believe and has many hatches not included with AutoCAD. There are a few different ways to get a hold of a ‘.PAT’ file, it doesn’t have to be straight from AutoCAD necessarily (small chance I could be wrong here). ![]() If it’s complex, you’ll have to dig something up on an internet search. My advice would be that if your hatch pattern is very simple (just lines) you can create it yourself. It looks super useful… too good to be free… there must be some catch? There’s a website called … but I want to express a caveat that I have never downloaded anything from that site. The attached image shows a couple hatch patterns I made (for Revit actually, hence one for each angle there were ways around that even but I’m risking going off on a tangent here). Creating a custom hatch definition in an AutoCAD. Chiming in more as an AutoCAD expert here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |