About Fill Patterns

Use fill patterns to define the appearance of surfaces that are cut or shown in projection.

Video: Create a Fill Pattern

When defining a surface pattern or a cut pattern to use in the model, you can specify different fill patterns and colors for the foreground and background.

Examples
Brick wall Concrete block wall
In an elevation, the surface pattern of the wall uses the block fill pattern drawn in red over a solid gray background. In a section view, the wall's cut pattern uses the diagonal crosshatch fill pattern drawn in red over a solid gray background. In an elevation, the surface pattern of the wall uses the block fill pattern drawn in red over a concrete fill background draw in black. In a section view, the wall's cut pattern uses the diagonal crosshatch fill pattern drawn in red over a concrete fill background draw in black.

Creating and managing fill patterns

Revit includes several fill patterns and stores them in the default project template file. Alternatively, you can create your own or edit an existing fill pattern to meet your needs. Click Manage tabSettings panelAdditional Settings drop-downFill Patterns.

A fill pattern is stored in the project file in which it was created. To save the pattern to a project template, open the template file and create the pattern there.

You can transfer fill patterns between projects using the Transfer Project Standards tool.

Using fill patterns for surface patterns and cut patterns

Use fill patterns to define the surface patterns and cut patterns for the graphic representation of elements in the model. For each surface pattern and cut pattern, you can specify one fill pattern and color for the foreground, and another fill pattern and color for the background. (For examples, see the table above.) Use these patterns to distinguish elements visually in views, improve the readability of project documentation, and meet office or industry standards.

You can specify surface patterns and cut patterns in several ways: