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#IonicColumn

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#Milestone8 - #SimpleIntercolumniation

Floor Plan of archetypal Greek Temple https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/803021258359555093

Front and back #intercolumniation https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/803076419096100108

Side intercolumniation https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/803089629244302486

#Milestone7 - Complete #IonicOrder https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/800050647761776920

#Milestone6#Braids #3StrandBraids https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/799602946527813102

#Milestone5#EggsAndDarts https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/797069447808333887

#Milestone4#IonicScroll https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/795361973789834465

#Milestone3#IonicColumn https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/792803978865652429

#Milestone2 — Classic #IonicEntablature https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/791021871062069787

#Milestone1#IonicPedestal https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/790752092700055739
#IonicColumn #Flutes

In https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/799864068250003272, I mentioned rounding off the radius of the bottom circle, but you don't have to. #CAD tools are perfectly happy working with 15.0728 or even higher precision as they are with 15.

After placing the two circles as described in that post, use the full #primaryProfileCurve of the shaft from https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/791794072490907090 as a #sweepingRail and the two circles for the flutes as the #sweepingCurves and #sweepOneRail for the body of a single shaft. Close #planarHoles on both ends to get an #airtight solid.

Then draw a sphere at the center of the top circle using the same radius as the circle, and perform a #booleanUnion between the sphere and the flute body.

If you want a round bottom for the flute, repeat the sphere at the center of the larger circle using the same radius (15.0 or 15.0728) and perform another boolean union to get one flute.

Switch to the top view and make 24 copies of the flute (including the original) centered at the column axis and #group the 24 flutes.

Finally, perform a #booleanDifference with the flutes group on a copy of the solid #unadornedShaft to get a fluted variant.

The result is a column shaft with flutes carved out. Save the flutes separately for future reuse.

This concludes the entire #IonicOrder, including all #decorativeElements.

Now we pause and reflect: The whole exercise seemed like one of #art and #sculpture. Where is the #architecture in all of this?

Without a ceiling or a roof, there is no building. Without additional columns or walls, there is no ceiling. So, while we have completed the Ionic Order itself, we only have the first #buildingBlock — a single column.

Next step is to repeat the columns to create a #colonnade, which together with supporting walls or additional colonnades can support a ceiling.

Just like with everything else in design, there are rules of proportion for #intercolumniation, or space between columns.
#Milestone6#Braids #3StrandBraids

#Sinusoid from #Helix https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/797893262102038801

Braid Geometry https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/797916882329430160

Braid Strand https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/798252244743520392

Braid Assembly https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/799340150182400358

Braid #FlowOnSurface https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/799514176049543252

#Milestone5#EggsAndDarts https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/797069447808333887

#Milestone4#IonicScroll https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/795361973789834465

#Milestone3#IonicColumn https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/792803978865652429

#Milestone2 — Classic #IonicEntablature https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/791021871062069787

#Milestone1#IonicPedestal https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/790752092700055739
The bottom 1/3 of the #columnShaft for an #IonicColumn is a perfect cylinder. So the line below point B is a straight line.

In https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/791723063470910081, we blended the bottom end of the 60° arc and the top end of the long interpolated curve between points J and K. Now blend the bottom end of the interpolated curve and the top end of the straight line between points B and C to obtain the 3rd and final #NURBS segment for the #primaryProfileCurve of the shaft.

Just like there's a #cavetto and #fillet near the #neck of the shaft, there is a fillet and cavetto near the foot of the shaft. However, there is a subtle difference between the two. The cavetto near the neck is tangential to the blended #NURBS curve that is not a straight line. The profile curve for the cavetto near the foot is tangential to a straight line.

There is a special name for a cavetto that is tangential to a straight line or flat surface, like the two cavetto moldings in the #dado of the #pedestal. It's called a #conge. Another alternate name for the cavetto molding is #cove, which is evocative of "cave" because of its concave profile curve.

Above the neck is a fillet 8 units tall and an #astragal 16 units tall that #Scarlata puts in braces in the column shaft section within his tables of #VignolaProportions, with a note saying they are not counted as part of the shaft but are accounted for as part of the #capital.

I decided to include the top fillet as part of the shaft and keep the astragal with the capital. It does not change the design or alter the proportions in any way, but the inclusion of the fillet makes it more practical for #3DPrinting and #CNCMilling of the neck. This concludes the profile curve for the shaft with a height of 291 parts or 2328 units + 8 for fillet.

The column shaft is tapered in the upper 2/3 due to #entasis whose purpose is to make optical corrections to the shape of the column which, without correction, appeared concave near the top.