Architects use them. So do plumbers, engineers, designers, and surveyors. Hope this sorta helped!
They're not actually drawings, although they started out that way when the coin was first designed. They're stylized images of wheat ears and symbolize America's agricultural power.
scale questions
One of the things the american has seen is the uncle sam drawings. it has a man that is talking to you with a finger pointing. That art had some convincing power to reclute fellow americans.
"Monticello" is the name of Thomas Jefferson's home, and he did design it himself, so that's probably the answer.
Scale drawings are used by artists, architects and builders to get an accurate drawing either smaller or larger than the actual thing is.
Architects, fashion designers, landscapers.
Architects use them. So do plumbers, engineers, designers, and surveyors. Hope this sorta helped!
constuction workers, architects, and drafters also map-makers
architects property designers
Yes a fashion designer does use a scale drawing...
You need ratios to find out what scale to use.
Scientists, Engineers, Military and Architects
Surveying and land use jobs which use a map to scale. Also construction jobs will use plans of the building which are drawn to scale with a stated scale factor.
Architects usually use CAD software on computers. Some use the old method of large, well-lit drafting boards with drafting machines. As far as materials, they use plenty of rulers, T-squares, manifolds and speciality paper and pens.
A. Axonometric and oblique drawings-three-dimensional drawings constructed without the use of perspective-are gaining popularity because they are quicker and easier to execute, and because their dimensions remain true to scale for any view. Because these views are easy to draw with instruments, they become suitable for use on working drawings.
Most architects use a CAD program called AutoCAD to produce drawings; there are other alternatives out there (ArchiCAD, Vectorworks, Microstation, Revit) as well but none are so widely used. Most architects use Adobe Photoshop for presentation work, some use Illustrator and InDesign as well. Then there are other specialist programs for writing specifications, producing contract administration paperwork, risk assessments etc. And almost everyone uses Microsoft Office - though few architects can use Excel really well.