Isometric 30° · 5 mm on Legal · Landscape
The textbook isometric grid - three axes at 120°, 5 mm cell pitch.
- Sheet
- Legal
- Standard
- US Loose
- Dimensions
- 356 × 216 mm
- Orientation
- Landscape
- Cell pitch
- 5 mm
- Geometry
- 30°
About this template
A true isometric grid with all three principal axes inclined at 30° from horizontal and spaced exactly 120° apart. Equal foreshortening on every axis means a 5 mm cell drawn on paper represents 5 mm on every face of the modelled solid, removing the perceptual stretch that plagues casual axonometric sketches. See also: A short reading list on technical drawing standards can help you put any of these grids in their historical and standards-based context.
Best used for
- Quick concept sketches of furniture, joinery and millwork details
- Mechanical part studies before moving to CAD
- Exploded assembly diagrams for installation guides
- Brick and block coursing studies for masonry walls
Why Legal in landscape
8.5×14" - useful when a section needs extra vertical run, or for elevation strips and long timeline diagrams. The landscape orientation gives you 356 mm of horizontal run and 216 mm of vertical, which suits wide subjects - site plans, sequence diagrams, multi-column layouts - where the eye reads left-to-right. Trim and bleed allowances on consumer printers will normally remove a 5 mm strip from each edge; this grid is generated to remain measurable even after that trim, with no critical content placed inside the printer-margin band.
Standards and lineage
Aligns with the isometric projection convention described in ISO 5456-3:1996 and the British Standard BS 8888 pictorial drawing recommendations. The Legal sheet itself follows US Loose, and the title-block conventions assumed by this template come from ISO 5457:1999 - the international standard governing how technical drawings are framed, dated, and signed. Background reading: See our scale-and-projection guides for a deeper dive on how all the standards in this lineage interact in practice.
A short history of this grid
Isometric projection was formalised by Sir William Farish in 1822 as a teaching aid for engineering apprentices at Cambridge - long before computer modelling, the 30° grid let draughtsmen explore three-dimensional ideas with nothing more than a pencil and a triangle.
Printing notes
For accurate output, print at 100 % scale - never "fit to page", which silently shrinks the sheet by 4–6 % and breaks every measured cell. Use a laser printer if the grid will be traced over with ink, since inkjet inks bleed through technical pen and pencil. If your printer cannot handle the full Legal sheet, scale the SVG to the next-smaller paper size before printing - every GridCraft grid is delivered as vector artwork so it scales cleanly. The downloaded SVG carries the physical sheet dimensions in millimetres, so a compliant print driver should print at 1:1 by default. Our how-to-print guide walks through the calibration test in 30 seconds.
Designer's note
Specialty grids reward the discipline of choosing the right sheet for the right drawing. A Isometric 30° · 5 mm on Legal is not a one-size-fits-all sheet - it's a calibrated tool for a specific class of problem. Use it where the page suits the drawing; reach for a different sheet when it doesn't. The catalogue is large precisely so you don't have to compromise on the projection, scale or sheet size.