Basic Perspective Drawing: A Visual Approach -
These are the diagonal lines you draw from the corners of your objects back to the vanishing point. They create the illusion of depth. If you’re drawing a cube, these lines form the "sides" that make it look solid rather than flat. 4. Convergence and Scaling
Draw a smaller square "inside" those lines to cut off the back of the box. Basic Perspective Drawing: A Visual Approach
Always start with a light touch. These construction lines (orthogonals) are usually erased once the final shape of the object is defined. These are the diagonal lines you draw from
Use a ruler to connect the corners of that square to the dot. Basic Perspective Drawing: A Visual Approach
In , lines lead to two separate points on the far left and right. 3. Orthogonal Lines (The "Receding" Lines)
In , all lines that go "back" into space lead to a single point.
Perspective drawing is essentially the art of representing 3D space on a 2D surface. Think of it as a "visual trick" that mimics how our eyes actually see the world—where things look smaller as they get further away. 1. The Horizon Line (Eye Level)