Revit hatch patterns at 1 4 1 0 scale.
Scale of patterns on the floor.
One of the loveliest floor tile patterns especially if you have some special tiles to highlight the windmill pattern is a real classic.
Revit provides various fill patterns that can be applied to surfaces that are cut or shown in projection to help differentiate between materials.
An example of the different use cases for each is a brick pattern on the face of a wall versus a crosshatch pattern on a wall.
If you want to scale patterns in illustrator you can use the scale tool s.
Start by switching to the level 1 floor plan view.
Made using square and brick sized tiles the brick tiles form a kind of frame around the central square tile.
Another way to access the scale tool is by right clicking on your object and selecting transform scale from the menu.
The mixed and matched tile sizes draw subtle attention to the floor without distracting from the rest of the space.
This pattern is fairly labor intensive to lay but gets quicker once you get into the rhythm of.
On most of them i have not defined the exact room shapes on them rather i have simply repeated the pattern over a large enough span at scale so relevant area can be covered.
The difference is model patterns remain a fixed size relative to the model and drafting patterns remain a fixed size relative to the scale of the view that is displayed in.
With these floor patterns there is less emphasis on making them usable at 1 350 though i have included 6 x4 printable jpgs for some of them.
These fill patterns can be applied as model patterns or drafting patterns.
The versailles pattern gets a modern makeover in a cool toned monochromatic space.