Imagine you're looking at a picture, it feels flat, but when you add perspective, it looks like it has depth, just like the world around you.
Perspective is like giving your drawing a 3D feel. Think of it as using lines to show how things get smaller as they go further away, like when you look down the street, the cars and houses seem to shrink into the distance.
How Perspective Works
- When you draw something far away, you make it smaller than something close.
- You can use lines that meet at a point, called vanishing points, to show how things get smaller in the distance, like train tracks running off into the horizon.
- This makes your drawing look more realistic, just like when you look at a real street or room.
It’s like playing with toy cars on a table. If you put one close and one far away, the far one looks tiny. That's perspective in action, it helps your painting feel like a window into another world! Imagine you're looking at a picture, it feels flat, but when you add perspective, it looks like it has depth, just like the world around you.
Perspective is like giving your drawing a 3D feel. Think of it as using lines to show how things get smaller as they go further away, like when you look down the street, the cars and houses seem to shrink into the distance.
Examples
- A drawing of a hallway that gets narrower as it goes further away
- A box on the ground that seems to shrink as it moves toward the horizon
- Using two vanishing points to create the illusion of depth in a room
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See also
- How Does Introduction to One Point Perspective Work?
- How Does Illustration VS Painting Work?
- How Does Painting — what is PAINTING definition Work?
- How Does The Secret to Painting the Right Color Work?
- How Does Perspective Drawing - 05: Atmospheric Perspective Work?