Hello all,
I have searched for an answer here and am surprised this question has not been asked before. What I want to do is create a material that has both a brick surface pattern and an underlying solid grey surface pattern. Is this possible? The reason for this is, as the post title suggests, to represent different colors of brick in the same plane.
Thanks in advance,
-David
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by joaorcunha. Go to Solution.
do you want something like in the attached file. ... in shaded mode for elevations?
Your Name
I'm affraid this is not possible... to achieve this, we create a region fill with the solid color we need, making it transparent, then placing over the wall with brick pattern applied.
I cannot find a good alternative to this with current Revit release.
Regards,
João Cunha.
That's what I was afraid of. I have been using the workaround you describe, but had hoped for a more elegant solution.
hmm....that you want I do not think it could be done in Hidden Lines Visual Style....
It could be a workaround to do it from Shaded with Edges Visual Style...as in the attached file...
I did the following steps:
If Phase Filter is set to None the shade moded will appear in color...
Your Name
Hello,
Found this thread while looking for ideas.
The way we did it was by using a Generic Model Face Based family.
A Void extrusion is used to cut through the wall.
A matching Solid extrusion is used to fill in the hole. A Material parameter is assigned to this form so that it can use a different material.
Visibility parameter is added to the Solid form so that one can get a hole or brick of different colour using the same family.
In your project file, assign the Flemish Bond pattern to the corresponding material and then assign that material to the wall in question.
Load the Face-based family into the project and host it to the face of the wall.
Move the family to match the flemish bond pattern assigned to the wall.
Select the face-based family and array it using the pattern as reference to set the distance between family instances.
See RVT attached with both options.
Hope this helps.