Top Banner
Two-Point Perspective
13

Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Apr 01, 2015

Download

Documents

Breonna Lowden
Welcome message from author
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
Page 1: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Two-Point Perspective

Page 2: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at an angle.

Page 3: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

All lines that are parallel to each other in the real world will converge at the same vanishing point. The green lines converge at the left vanishing point, and the orange lines converge at the right vanishing point.

Page 4: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Parallel lines on the outside of a building also converge at vanishing points.

Page 5: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

The vanishing points are always on the horizon line, the viewer’s eye level.

Page 6: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.
Page 7: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Horizon Line

The vanishing points are always on the horizon line, the viewer’s eye level.

Page 8: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.
Page 9: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Horizon Line

Page 10: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.

Creating a box in 2-point perspective

Page 11: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.
Page 12: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.
Page 13: Two-Point Perspective. You see two-point perspective when your eye is not perpendicular to the walls. In other words, the walls look like they are at.