There is somethng visually powerful about the look of old school blueprints. To many of us over 40, white lines on a deep blue background say "architecture" and design like nothing else. Not that one wishes to re-live the past, but it just so happens that photoshop makes it remarkably easy to recreate that look. The product design sketches below illustrate this process.
![](https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5661dd4ae4b067011cce0345/t/56622046e4b0f2173fc295ec/1408284800373/1000w/Office-Desk-invert+copy.jpg)
In this example, the architectural rendering and product design client is a famous startup associated with a great American city that has seen finer days. That city is, to a great degree, relying on startups like the one in question to... bootstrap itself up from its post-industrial ashes.
![](https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5661dd4ae4b067011cce0345/t/56622046e4b0f2173fc29799/1408284449028/1000w/Orb+Lamp-invert.jpg)
The designer whose product design ideas I am helping to illustrate--one of today's most original and influential American architects--was asked to help the client re-interpret iconic furniture and lighting designs of the 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s.
![](https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5661dd4ae4b067011cce0345/t/56622046e4b0f2173fc2979a/1408284497997/1000w/Office-Tall+Shelf-invert.jpg)
The sketches don't show specific designs--it's too early in the process for that--but rather were made as a kind of visual stenography, recording the earliest conversations between client and designer.
The photoshop rendering technique used to re-create the look of the old school "blueprint" era is as follows:
Scan pencil rendering in color mode at 150 dpi
Image > Levels > (adjust to taste, with emphasis on texture and imperfections in sketch)
Image > Adjustments > Invert
Layer > New adjustment layer > Hue and Saturation
Click on "Colorize"
Set Hue at 198, Saturation at 48 and Lightness at 12 to 20 (depending on taste)
![](https://james-akers-msa2.squarespace.com/storage/Clip%20Lamp.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1408375954146)
This architectural rendering and product design sketch shows the original before the photoshop rendering technique was created.
![](https://james-akers-msa2.squarespace.com/storage/Clip%20Lamp-invert.jpg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1408375970563)
(Author James Akers is a registered architect and architectural illustrator with over 25 years experience. His YouTube Procreate tutorial channel has thousands of subscribers (please join us!), and he provides both in-house and studio-based sketching and rendering—what one might call "design stenography" services—to many of NYC's and Boston’s leading architects.)