- Company Directory
- ID Jobs
- Awards
- Blog
- Guides
- Discussion
- About
- Contact Us
- Terms of Use
- Privacy Policy
- Advertise
- Sign In / Join Now
- Company Directory
- ID Jobs
- Awards
- Blog
- Guides
- Discussion
e
Sign In / Join Now
e
By David Seliger - December 26, 2011
Graphic Design
One of my absolute favorite things in the world are cutaway drawings, also known as cross-sections. As a child, I would pore over the drawings trying to absorb as many of the details as possible. In fact, I still do that! Cutaways are a fantastic intersection of technical drawing, graphic design, transportation design and architecture. Over the course of this blog series, I'll be spotlighting some of the masters of the medium. First up is Hans Jenssen.
The Danish artist currently resides in the UK where he has made a career illustrating the hidden workings of vehicles, both real and fictional. In the 1990's, DK released Look Inside Cross-Sections, a popular book series on various modes of transportation, including military planes, trains and cars. The books were illustrated by Jenssen and his artistic partner Richard Chasemore (whom I'll cover in another post).
In 1998, DK came out with the first Star Wars: Incredible Cross-Sections book, featuring cutaways of the Millenium Falcon, X-Wing Fighter, and the Death Star. The book proved extremely successful and was soon followed up with cutaway books for the prequel trilogy, as well cross-sections of locations from the movies.
Before starting the project, Jenssen and Chasemore spent two weeks in the art department at Skywalker Rancher intensely researching reference material—everything from concept art to production paintings to physical models. The entire book took about five months to produce, with three to four weeks for each cutaway. The cross-section books are generally considered the ultimate authority on vehicles in the Star Wars universe, so Jenssen and Chasemore had the pressure of both George Lucas and thousands of fans on their shoulders!
Masters of the Cutaway
» Part 1: Hans Jenssen
»
» Part 3: Yoshihiro Inomoto
» Part 4: Stephen Biesty
» Part 5: Graham Bleathman
»
» Part 7: Richard Chasemore
»
» Part 9: Kevin Hulsey's and Steven Howard's Process
-
o
Favorite This
-
Q
12
Comment
Comments
-
Hans Jenssen
8 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Umm, I'm not Danish.
!Report as spam
- See AlsoThe 50 Most Influential Gadgets of All TimeThe cutaway drawing and its artists - Page 262 - The Nostalgia ForumFan art, PS and CG imagesChrysler Accessories | Interior & Exterior Accessories
Cutaway-Artist
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Max Millar ?
!Report as spam
-
Albert Llort
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Thanks for these publications. I'm totally fascinated by these style of illustrations, I could be hours and hours watching them!
!Report as spam
-
Ignacio Urbina
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Great posts of cutaway and exploded views drawings!
Take a look of an article I wrote about that topic on my Blog:
Anatomy of objects: exploiting or communicating the function
http://bit.ly/fqPBxXBest!
!Report as spam
-
Lmo
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
When illustrators were illustrators. Pens, ink, templates, brushes, and most importantly, skill!
!Report as spam
-
HooF
12 years ago
Sounds lads, great stuff.
Any links to larger versions of these images?!Report as spam
-
Dave Seliger
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
@Paolo - Inomoto is Part 3, going live tomorrow!
!Report as spam
-
Paolo Salvagione
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Don't forget Yoshihiro Inomoto (http://tinyurl.com/78zmlcg)
!Report as spam
-
Pablo Villaverde
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Absolutely fantastic!
!Report as spam
-
Mike Farnham
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Amazing, I used to love those cutaway books as a child. I had the one about castles and how they were built and run.
!Report as spam
-
Craig Purcell
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
I have always liked cutaway & exploded views for their ability to 3 dimensionally view how something goes together (or comes apart) and maintain some sort of relationship of the detailed parts to the whole.
!Report as spam
-
Kat
12 years ago
Z
Z
Reply
Is this a spaceship? :D
!Report as spam
Share your thoughts
-
-
-
Join over 240,000 designers who stay up-to-date with the Core77 newsletter.
Subscribe
Test it out; it only takes a single click to unsubscribe
Directory Company Profiles
Core77
Industrial Design
Resources
-
Core77 Directory
Find the Best Industrial Design Companies
Go - Brainchild Engineering Brainchild Engineering, based in Northville MI, is a product development and engineering company ded...
- Springtime design Springtime is a creative force that develops exciting, sustainable and paradigm-shifting products, b...
- The Metcalfe Group, Inc. Located in the greater Cleveland, Ohio area, we are an experienced full-service product design firm ...
- studioFAR Established in 2009, studioFAR is a softgoods design firm based in the Mission district of San Franc...
- Hatch Duo, LLC Founded by an award-winning team with over 20 years of combined product design experience, Hatch Duo...
- Datum3D Product Development Datum3D is a one-stop shop product development company located in the Greater Boston Area. Founded i...
- Bluemap Design BlueMap design is a multi-disciplinary product development firm. Founded by Simon Yan in 2001, the f...
One of my absolute favorite things in the world are cutaway drawings, also known as cross-sections. As a child, I would pore over the drawings trying to absorb as many of the details as possible. In fact, I still do that! Cutaways are a fantastic intersection of technical drawing, graphic design, transportation design and architecture. Over the course of this blog series, I'll be spotlighting some of the masters of the medium. First up is Hans Jenssen.
The Danish artist currently resides in the UK where he has made a career illustrating the hidden workings of vehicles, both real and fictional. In the 1990's, DK released Look Inside Cross-Sections, a popular book series on various modes of transportation, including military planes, trains and cars. The books were illustrated by Jenssen and his artistic partner Richard Chasemore (whom I'll cover in another post).
In 1998, DK came out with the first Star Wars: Incredible Cross-Sections book, featuring cutaways of the Millenium Falcon, X-Wing Fighter, and the Death Star. The book proved extremely successful and was soon followed up with cutaway books for the prequel trilogy, as well cross-sections of locations from the movies.
Before starting the project, Jenssen and Chasemore spent two weeks in the art department at Skywalker Rancher intensely researching reference material—everything from concept art to production paintings to physical models. The entire book took about five months to produce, with three to four weeks for each cutaway. The cross-section books are generally considered the ultimate authority on vehicles in the Star Wars universe, so Jenssen and Chasemore had the pressure of both George Lucas and thousands of fans on their shoulders!
Masters of the Cutaway\n
» Part 1: Hans Jenssen\n
» \n
» Part 3: Yoshihiro Inomoto\n
» Part 4: Stephen Biesty\n
» Part 5: Graham Bleathman\n
» \n
» Part 7: Richard Chasemore\n
» \n
» Part 9: Kevin Hulsey's and Steven Howard's Process
","excerpt":"One of my absolute favorite things in the world are cutaway drawings, also known as cross-sections. As a child, I would pore over the drawings trying to absorb as many of the details as possible. In fact, I still do that! Cutaways are a fantastic intersection of technical drawing, graphic...","social_excerpt":"","title":"Masters of the Cutaway Part 1: Hans Jenssen","lead_image_large_url":"https://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/lead_n_spotlight/lead_400_21402_.jpg","lead_image_small_url":"https://s3files.core77.com/blog/images/lead_n_spotlight/lead_small_21402_.jpg","url_name":"","channels":[{"id":1,"channel_id":0,"name":"Home Page","is_public":false,"url_name":"Home-Page","active":false,"number_of_featured_to_show":0,"show_featured_slider":false,"site_id":0,"system_channel":true,"order_no":1,"user_id":0,"modified_by":0,"created_on":"0001-01-01T00:00:00","status":5,"is_a_user_interest":false,"is_top_level":false,"number_of_posts":0,"users_channel_manage":[],"users_accessible":[],"auto_accept":false,"can_be_submitted_to":false,"is_collection":false,"collection_order_no":0,"lead_images_within":[],"contributors":[],"total_number_favorites":0},{"id":61,"channel_id":0,"name":"Graphic Design","is_public":false,"url_name":"Graphic-Design","active":false,"number_of_featured_to_show":0,"show_featured_slider":false,"site_id":0,"system_channel":false,"order_no":1,"user_id":0,"modified_by":0,"created_on":"0001-01-01T00:00:00","status":5,"is_a_user_interest":false,"is_top_level":false,"number_of_posts":0,"users_channel_manage":[],"users_accessible":[],"auto_accept":false,"can_be_submitted_to":false,"is_collection":false,"collection_order_no":0,"lead_images_within":[],"contributors":[],"total_number_favorites":0}],"user_profile":{"user_id":199,"first_name":"David","last_name":"Seliger","handle":"David-Seliger","email":"core77dave@gmail.com","avatar_url":"https://s3files.core77.com/users/avatars146053_199_avatar_40_lJevjsyWf.jpg","avatar_medium_url":"https://s3files.core77.com/users/avatars146052_199_avatar_80_zlvDdgDao.jpg","number_of_published_posts":0},"published_into_channel_on":"2011-12-26T05:00:00","spotlight_image_large_url":"","spotlight_image_small_url":"","legacy_url":"http://www.core77.com/blog/graphic_design/masters_of_the_cutaway_part_1_hans_jenssen_21402.asp","title_image_large_url":"","title_image_small_url":"","subtitle":""} var this_post = new Post_Public({ container_id: "#post", data: this_post_json, number_of_posts: total_posts, meta_data_set_initial: meta_data_obj }); this_post.init(); });