Continue to Site

Welcome to 3DCADForums

Join our CAD community forums where over 25,000 users interact to solve day to day problems and share ideas. We encourage you to visit, invite you to participate and look forward to your input and opinions. Acrobat 3D, AutoCAD, Catia, Inventor, IronCAD, Creo, Pro/ENGINEER, Solid Edge, SolidWorks, and others.

3D perspectives in Autocad - help!!!

M

MAD

Guest
Ive drawn up a nice kitchen perspective in autocad 2006 using DVIEW command, and i want to take it into photoshop to manipulate.

Using DVIEW has let me hide unwanted lines that are behind other objects, but when i press enter to come out of DVIEW command and save the view the hidden lines re-appear

any suggestions???
 
perspective view

You're really going to like 2007! You can work in perspective view all the time.

I'm not aware of any way to do what you said in AutoCAD, but since you want to bring it into Photoshop as a bitmap image, I would probably just take a screen capture of it and bring that in. You can try Windows' Print Screen key, but you'll have more options (name of file, where, type of file, cropping, etc.) with a screen capture program like SnagIt.

Ellen
 
View > Shade > Gourand with edges

.
Unless I am missing something all you have to do after exiting the dview command is to go to the View pull down menu and select Shade > .....pick your type....gourand with edges etc..

Then you stay in that 'shaded' mode until you go back and change it back to wire frame etc...

Hope this helps.

DG
www.dgcad.com
Autodesk Training Video Tutorials
 
Thanks. How can I plot a shaded drawing? When I have a look at my preview it switches back to the wireframe
 
If you save the view you generated with DVIEW such as PERS1, then go to paper space and open a viewport to model space. If not already showing in the view port, ten restore the view named PERS1. When back in paper space, right click the viewport and choose from list Shade Plot. You can plot as wireframe, shaded or rendered.

Under render options in AutoCAD you can assign materials, lights, etc. to get a nice rendering with shadows and all.

Mike McGuire
[email protected]
 

Articles From 3DCAD World

Sponsor

Back
Top