It seems you’re asking for a deep, technical report on “Archline XP interior crack in 23 high quality.” However, this phrase is ambiguous. It could refer to:

  1. A crack in the interior surface of a material (e.g., drywall, concrete, coating) related to a product or standard called “Archline XP” — but no known building material or software by that exact name exists in major industry databases (e.g., ASTM, ISO, CSI MasterFormat).
  2. A possible misspelling of “Archicad” (Graphisoft) or “ArchiLine” (a construction system) — “ArchiLine XP” was a thermal break profile system used in passive house construction. A crack in such a system at “23 high quality” might refer to a specific quality level or test standard.
  3. A rendering or 3D modeling software issue — Archline XP might be a typo for “Archline” or “ArchiCAD,” and “interior crack” could be a visual artifact in a 23-high-quality render setting.

Given the lack of precise references, I will assume you are referring to structural or finish cracks in an “ArchiLine XP” thermal insulation support system (used in high-performance building envelopes) at a “23” quality level (possibly a standard or a crack width in mm/100 or a grading scale). Below is a deep, structured report based on plausible engineering and quality control principles.


Step 21: Enable Volumetrics

Add a Volumetric Fog (low density, 0.05). As the crack intersects the fog, it will create subtle light rays leaking through the fissure—a dramatic, high-quality effect.


Step 6: Draw the Crack Path

Use the Spline Tool (not the line tool) to draw the crack trajectory. A high-quality crack is never perfectly straight. Create a jagged path with 4-5 control points.

Steps for Interior Design with ArchLine.XP