32
1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane.

1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

1

Perspective Construction

One point at a time.Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line &

Projection Plane.

Page 2: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

2

GL – the “ground line” HL – the horizon line SP – the “station point” – basically eyelevel – usually located on HL

FrontView

Page 3: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

3

OB – the “object point” – the point to be put in perspective; happens to be behind the PPPP – the “projection plane” – the plane of the paper or monitor screen

TopView

Page 4: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

4

Top & front views combinedOB is not yet shown in the front view.

Page 5: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

5

Line A passes through OB and crosses the Projection Plane at an angle, In working with a single point, this line A is more or less arbitrary.

Page 6: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

6

Mark the true height (or elevation) of the Object Point in the front view. It happens to be above HL.

Page 7: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

7

The intersection of Line A and the PP is projected straight down to locate point 4, on the true elevation of OB.

Page 8: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

8

Line through SP, parallel to Line A, drawn in the top view.The intersection of that line with the PP is projected straight down to the HL. That defines the Vanishing Point, VP.

Page 9: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

9

The line joining Point 4 and VP is Line A as seen from the front view.The line of sight from SP to OB crosses the PP. From that intersection,project straight down to that front view Line A.

Page 10: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

10

The point 3 is the point OB in perspective, as viewed from the point SP.

Page 11: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

11

All that work to place one point in the perspective drawing. . . .

Page 12: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

12

Perspective Construction

PlanesParallel edges converge at a Vanishing Point.

Locating the front & back edges.

Page 13: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

13

Three identical planes, viewed from SP. We choose the PP to be atthe front edge of the middle plane.

Topview

Page 14: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

14

Front view is added. The VP is identified by projecting the intersectionof Line A & PP onto the HL. Line A is parallel to the planes.

Note that the HL is above the true height of the planes. We are looking down on them.

Page 15: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

15

Likewise, the front & back edges of the planes are located by projectingdownward the intersections of lines from the SP with the PP.

Page 16: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

16

The left most of the three planes is distorted, just as Greenland is distorted on a Mercator projection. Even though that plane is rather far to the observer’s left, we force its projection onto the flat projection plane, PP.

Page 17: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

17

Perspective Construction

A Street SceneMultiple Vanishing Points.

Page 18: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

18

Top view of a street scene, drawn “full-sized.”

Page 19: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

19

Choose SP & PP. Place HL & GL in front view.

Page 20: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

20

Project the sight lines from SP to the front & back of the building.Establish the right VP by drawing a line A parallel to the right side of the building.

Page 21: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

21

Draw in the right side of the building in perspective.

Page 22: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

22

Repeat the process for the left side of the building.

Page 23: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

23

Page 24: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

24

The street is not parallel to the building, so it has its own VP.

Page 25: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

25

Notice that the street crosses the PP at ground level, GL.

Page 26: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

26

Since there is only one tree next to the street, we chose to use the VP of the street to get the correct positions for the top & bottom of the tree. The height of the tree is less than the height of the building.

Page 27: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

27

Page 28: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

28

Page 29: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

29

The street scene in perspective.

Page 30: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

30

Blank, intentionally.

Page 31: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

31

Perspective Summary

• Draw a full-sized top view.• Select a convenient SP & PP.• Draw the HL, GL & SP in the front view, which

will become the perspective view.• Select a line in the top view. Draw a line (Line

A) through SP, parallel to that selected line.• Project the intersection of Line A with PP down

to HL in the front view. That is the VP for the selected line, and all lines parallel to that line.

Page 32: 1 Perspective Construction One point at a time. Defining the Station Point, Vanishing Point, Horizon Line, Ground Line & Projection Plane

32

• In the top view, draw lines of sight from SP to reference points on the selected line, such as the front & back edges, or a midpoint.

• Project the intersections of those lines of sight with the PP down to the front view.

• If the reference point is not on the PP, then the selected line has to be extrapolated, in the top view, to intersect the PP. Project that intersection down to the “true height of that reference point” in the front view. That is point 4 mentioned on an earlier slide.

• The line connecting point 4 with the VP is the perspective version of the selected line in the top view.