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When a mason lays brick, he (or the designer) must choose between rough or gauged layout. In a rough layout the mortar tapers. In a gauged layout, the masonry unit is shaped. When a curve is sharp (small radius), the radial dimension of the unit must be sufficiently small to allow the taper to occur in the mortar. Otherwise it must be cut to allow the curve to be paved without either the mortar joint or the brick to taper to less than 0" thickness (overlap). A simple linetype might work. It won't work well, however, if the curve radius along the course isn't consistent. In other words, is the radius changing? Is the curve reversing? In those cases, linetype direction may need to be reversed.
In your illustration, it appears you have large radius circular paving patterns (not random curves).