Perspective Projection Cornell Notes Include in the notebook : Title, date Objective Notes w/ vocabulary highlighted, bolded, or underlined, projection flowchart, labelled sketches of different projections @ least 3 level 2 or 3 questions Summary that expresses what you learned (be specific) This should cover more than one page (9 activities included)
22
Embed
Perspective Projection Cornell Notes Include in the notebook: Title, date Objective Notes w/ vocabulary highlighted, bolded, or underlined, projection.
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Perspective Projection Cornell Notes Include in the notebook:
Title, dateObjectiveNotes w/ vocabulary highlighted, bolded, or underlined, projection flowchart, labelled sketches of different projections @ least 3 level 2 or 3 questionsSummary that expresses what you learned (be specific)This should cover more than one page (9 activities included)
Perspective Projection Tutorial(11/17-12/12)
A Projection is a representation of a 3D solid on a 2D surface
Perspective method used to control the illusion of depth in an image (describes how objects appear in relation to their distance from the observer)
One Point PerspectiveAll of the lines that are parallel to the horizon (at right-angles to the direction of our gaze) such as the railway sleepers and fence posts - go straight across or straight up and down. If they were longer, they'd keep going straight across, or straight up and down, staying the same distance apart and not meeting. To draw one-point perspective, we arrange our view of the subject so that one set of visible lines has a vanishing point right in front of us, and the set at right-angles goes out to infinity on each side. So if it's a road, it goes straight away from us, or if it is a house, one wall goes straight across in front of us, not sloping.
Quick Write (90 sec): Describe both drawings in detail. List the similarities and differences between the two (be specific)
Two Point Perspectiveviewing the object or scene so that we are looking at one corner, with two sets of parallel lines are moving away from us. two vanishing points each pair of horizontals (the top and bottom edge of a building, box or wall) will diminish towards the left or right vanishing point, the remaining set of parallel lines, the verticals, are still straight up-and-down