Full-scale? Did all parts have this?
I would hope not, since a Saturn IC stage drawn to scale would consume an enormous amount of paper. But yes in general, where full-scale drawings
can be made of a part, they were often made up until the CAD era. A J-size piece of drawing paper is 34 inches tall and as wide as you need it to be (within certain limits). That's the largest
standard size commonly used; you can use non-standard drawing sheets. The drawings I saw were fastened to the wall -- and it was a long wall! I have also seen full-size layout drawings of the CM and LM control panels.
During the 1940s it was common to hold the manufactured part up to the drawing to match the profile: a sort of machinist sanity check. This harks back to "loftsmen" in the shipbuilding industries who would lay out ship parts in full scale, etched in the wooden floors of the lofts above workshops. You actually did confirm the part by laying it on the floor. These loftsmen used long flexible splines tied into curves with ropes and nails in the floor.