Home

Blueprint

A blueprint is a reproduction of a technical drawing used primarily in architecture and engineering, traditionally produced as white lines on a blue background. The term also refers to a detailed plan or design.

The original blueprint process, developed in the 1840s by Sir John Herschel, used a cyanotype-based method.

In practice, blueprints typically included elements such as a title block with project name, author, scale,

Today, digital tools such as CAD and BIM have largely supplanted traditional blueprints, with most professional

A
sheet
coated
with
light-sensitive
iron
salts
was
placed
in
contact
with
an
original
drawing
and
exposed
to
ultraviolet
light.
The
resulting
image
featured
white
lines
on
a
distinctly
blue
field.
The
technique
offered
accurate,
low-cost
reproduction
and
became
the
standard
for
architectural
and
mechanical
drawings
for
much
of
the
19th
and
20th
centuries.
Later,
other
copying
processes
such
as
diazo
and
photocopy-based
methods
replaced
the
classic
cyanotype
blue,
but
the
name
"blueprint"
persisted.
sheet
number,
and
a
revision
history;
standardized
line
weights
and
symbols
denoted
different
features
and
materials.
Drawings
often
used
a
fixed
scale
and
were
presented
as
a
set
on
a
sheet
or
as
a
sheet
in
a
drawing
set.
drawings
produced
as
vector
files
and
printed
as
needed.
The
phrase
blueprint
endures
as
a
general
metaphor
for
a
detailed
plan
or
prototype,
even
when
the
physical
cyanotype
method
is
no
longer
used.