Why drawings are important




















Drawings are created based on the project specifications. The specifications detail the project objectives, functionality, and how the requirements will be met. Drawings then become the measuring stick for compliance to the specification. After construction of the control panel, the same set of drawings is used for on-site installation. A complete drawing set can easily reduce the amount of time spent on-site.

For example, drawings can detail equipment interconnections and field device locations. Without drawings done ahead of time, device locations and equipment would need to be found and then documented.

Consequently, this can quickly delay a project due to the time now being allocated to finding information that was needed ahead of time.

For some customers, time is money and at Huffman Engineering, this is taken seriously. The Huffman Team carefully considers schedules and strives to continually be on time, if not early on completion dates of projects. These drawings are a valuable resource for maintenance and troubleshooting.

Anne Quito, in an article on Quartz. Think of it as a way of observing the world and learning, something that can be done anytime, like taking notes, jotting down a thought, or sending a text. Drawing and sketching can be useful tools in many fields, from science and medicine to product development. Sketching can be a great way to take down notes or observations without being confined to words or lengthy descriptions. Remember, a picture is worth 1, words. What if you made a quick sketch instead of writing down your lengthy plan of action?

Not only can sketching help us plan and organize our thoughts, but it can also help us focus. Half of the participants were instructed to doodle while listening; the other half were not. It turns out those who doodled actually remembered a significant amount more of what they heard than those who did not. While random doodling can help hone your focus, drawing specific items or ideas can help you remember them better.

In another study cited in an article on Inc. Those who drew the words had a higher retention rate than those who wrote down the words. Reading, seeing, and drawing are all different ways to interact with an object or piece of information. Experiencing something from multiple perspectives helps us understand and remember it all the more. Recently, read and draw activities and worksheets have become popular as ways to engage children in reading and enhance their reading comprehension.

Doodling has also been known to relieve stress, helping people to make connections within their own memories and gain a stronger sense of self, according to Harvard research. While adult coloring books have exploded in popularity in recent years, Carl Jung is said to have promoted coloring and drawing mandalas years ago as a way to enhance psychological well-being and process thoughts and emotions. Drawing can be a distraction from stress and other negative emotions, and it can also serve to calm people.

Doodling or coloring can put people into an almost meditative state, calming and quieting their mind. Drawing, like writing, is a form of communication. However, we tend to overemphasize writing, positioning it as the best means of recording and sharing information. Of course, writing is essential; but drawing should not be ignored. In fact, drawing can enhance writing. When children draw before writing, their writing is generally richer. For parents and teachers, it is worthwhile to encourage children to doodle for fun, to enhance their drawing skills, and to use drawing as a tool in studying and planning.

I loved reading this post, Krista! Initially this is random scribble kineasthetic activity , but develops to a more controlled activity. These images generally exhibit their knowledge of something. Children begin to focus on detail and realistic features in their drawings. They are conscious of their peers and the level of detail in their drawings. Children begin to focus on the final product, on whether the image looks good and is pleasing to peers and parents.

They begin to have an understanding of three-dimensional space in their drawings. Students can often be displeased with the outcome. In the adolescent stage, a conscious decision must be made to continue drawing and engaging in visual thinking.

Images created become highly individualised. Drawing is used in many fields like medicine to teach observation skills in diagnosis, in anthropology as a method of taking field notes, in science to document experiments and processes, in design to conceptualise ideas, in architecture to map out and spatialise buildings, and in technology to develop prototypes.

Francis Wells , a cardiothoracic surgeon, does drawings in order to map out his surgery procedure, even to the extent of drawing with patient blood during the surgery as seen below.



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