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15 free wine glass and bottle CAD blocks in DWG and DXF in 2026

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 7 May 2025 · Updated 21 May 2026

Wine glasses and bottles are dressing blocks, but they are the kind of detail that makes a restaurant, bar or hospitality drawing feel real. This collection gathers 15 free wine glass and bottle CAD blocks in DWG and DXF — red, white and sparkling glasses, plus bottles in plan and elevation — drawn to scale and free for personal and commercial use, with no signup or watermark.

Use the plan-view glasses to set a table: a place setting on a restaurant layout reads as a real cover, and a row of covers proves a dining room holds its target number. Use the elevation glasses and bottles to dress bar elevations, presentation renders and hospitality boards, where a bottle on a back-bar shelf or a glass on a counter brings the scene to life.

The pack suits interior designers, architects and hospitality planners drawing restaurants, bars, hotels and event spaces. Pair the glassware with the table, chair and bar blocks you arrange them on, and keep them on a dressing layer so the detail enriches presentations without cluttering the technical set.

What's in the wine glass and bottle pack

The 15 blocks cover the glassware and bottles you reach for: red, white, sparkling and dessert-wine glasses, and wine bottles in plan and elevation, including bottle-and-glass groupings. Plan-view glasses set a place setting from above; elevation glasses and bottles dress a bar or a presentation render.

The set lets you build a believable cover and a stocked bar rather than repeating one glass. A correctly-shaped glass — a wider bowl for red, a narrower flute for sparkling — adds a layer of realism that a generic circle cannot, and the bottles give a back-bar or a wine display its character on an elevation.

Glassware sizes and the place setting

These are small objects, so think in tight ranges. A wine glass occupies a small footprint, roughly 60-90 mm across the base in plan, standing somewhere around 150-230 mm tall depending on the style. A wine bottle is roughly 70-90 mm across and around 300 mm tall. The blocks are drawn to believable sizes and you scale them to suit.

On a table the glass sits within the place setting, conventionally above and to the right of the cover with the cutlery. The practical value in plan is the cover itself: arranging a setting with a plate, cutlery and glass to scale shows how much table each diner needs, which feeds directly into how many covers a table and a dining room hold.

How to dress a setting or a bar with the set

Lay out the tables and chairs first, then add the glassware as dressing. Insert the plan-view glass with INSERT or by dragging the DWG, set INSUNITS to millimetres so it lands at true size, and place it in the correct spot in the place setting. Build one full cover as a small group, then copy it to every seat — and array a whole row of covers down a banqueting table in seconds.

For a bar, switch to the elevation glasses and bottles: line bottles along the back-bar shelves and set a glass or two on the counter to bring the elevation alive. Keep all the glassware on a dressing layer so you can freeze it for the technical plan and thaw it for renders and client presentations.

Per-item notes: glasses and bottles

Glass shape carries meaning, so it pays to use the right one. A wide-bowled glass reads as red wine, a narrower bowl as white, and a tall flute as sparkling; using the correct shape in a presentation setting shows attention to detail that clients notice. Dessert and sherry glasses are smaller still and suit a fine-dining cover.

Bottles work hardest in elevation — lined along a back-bar shelf, displayed in a wine rack, or grouped with glasses on a table for a styled render. The bottle-and-glass grouping blocks give you a ready styled vignette for a tabletop or a display, saving you arranging the elements by hand each time.

Plan and elevation roles

In plan, the glass is part of the place setting and, through the cover, a tool for proving dining capacity and table sizing. A dining-room plan dressed with covers communicates the seating density and the experience far better than empty tabletops, and it lets you count covers directly.

In elevation, the glasses and bottles dress bars, back-bars, wine displays and presentation renders, where they bring hospitality scenes to life. Drawing the glassware in both views from this pack keeps the hospitality detail consistent between the technical seating plan and the presentation bar elevation.

Where wine glass and bottle blocks are used

These blocks appear in restaurant and dining-room layouts, bar and lounge designs, hotel and banqueting drawings, event and wedding-venue plans, and any hospitality presentation that wants a dressed, lived-in feel. They pair with the table, chair, sofa and bar blocks in the furniture and accessories categories.

Free and licence-clear, the blocks suit student hospitality and interior projects as well as production fit-out drawings. The same glassware carries from an early mood plan through to a polished client render, so the table settings and bar dressing stay consistent from concept to presentation.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Are the wine glass and bottle CAD blocks free for commercial use?+

Yes. All 15 wine glass and bottle blocks download free in DWG and, where available, DXF, with no signup, watermark or attribution, cleared for commercial project use.

What size is a wine glass CAD block?+

A wine glass is drawn small — roughly 60-90 mm across the base and 150-230 mm tall depending on style — and a bottle around 70-90 mm across and 300 mm tall. Keep INSUNITS in millimetres so they insert at true size.

Should glassware go on the technical plan?+

Usually it sits on a separate dressing layer. Place it for presentations and renders and to set covers for capacity checks, then freeze the layer for the construction and seating-count set.

Do the blocks include plan and elevation views?+

Yes. The pack includes plan-view glasses for place settings and elevation glasses and bottles for bars and renders. Each block's page lists the views it ships with.

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