Perspective Made Easy
130 pages
English

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130 pages
English

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Description

This is the classic manual for learning perspective drawing and drawing in general. All the information is easy-to-understand and illustrated, with over 250 simple line drawings, 256 illustrations, and it perfectly explains to the reader every drawing concept.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 09 novembre 2021
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781774643815
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0050€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Perspective Made Easy
Ernest R. Norling

Firstpublished in 1939
Thisedition published by Rare Treasures
Victoria,BC Canada with branch offices in the Czech Republic and Germany
Trava2909@gmail.com
Allrights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced ortransmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage orretrieval system, except in the case of excerpts by a reviewer, whomay quote brief passages in a review.
PERSPECTIVE MADE EASY
by Ernest R. Norling



















To Professor Benjamin Harrison Brown
who has presented a complex Universe in simple terms
FOREWORD
Perspective is easy; yet surprisingly few artists are familiar with the simple laws that make it so. It is the purpose of this book to make these laws clear.
One of the things that have simplified perspective for us is our way of building things. We live in a world of square corners; our streets, buildings, furniture, all are designed with a square. We find it convenient to be able to fit any of the corners of a table into any of the corners of the room; hence we build that way. This fact has made perspective drawing quite simple. When we have learned to draw the humble brick we have learned practical perspective.
This book explains perspective step by step, depending on illustrations to carry the sequence. Some steps are repeated, but deliberately so, to emphasize their importance. A great deal of stress is placed on “the eye-level.” A bird’s-eye view and a worm’s-eye view of the world are quite different. A six-foot man in a crowd sees hats and hair, faces and shoulders. A four-foot child beside him sees hands, gloves, purses, and coattails. They are both seeing the same people at the same time. How different are their two visual worlds! Our height above the ground is an important factor when we sketch the world about us. The eye-level is really the key to perspective drawing.
The knowledge of perspective should be used as a guide to drawing and not as a device to harden into stiff mechanics what might have been a beautiful loosely handled sketch. We build a strong scaffolding for the construction of our bridge; later we discard the scaffolding and keep only the graceful span.

STEP ONE

THE HORIZON
THE VANISHING POINT
THE EYE-LEVEL



PERSPECTIVE
The artist’s business is to be able to draw an object so that it will look solid and not flat like the surface of the paper on which it is drawn. In so doing the artist employs a method that we call perspective.

A brick drawn without the use of perspective.
This is called a plan.

A brick drawn with the use of perspective.
This is called a drawing in perspective.
Perspective is used not only to make the object appear to have dimensions but also to cause it to appear close up or in the distance or to suggest a feeling of space.

THE HORIZON


Let us follow the railroad tracks out on the plain where there is level land in all directions as far as we can see. All around us we can see the sky meeting the distant plain in a long even line. This is called the horizon.
The ideal example of the horizon is seen when viewed across a large body of water where no distant shore is seen. At sea the horizon is one continuous line.
We may consider the horizon as continuous. This is true though the view may be obstructed by an object: a hand, a building, or a mountain. The horizon is still there though we go into the building and close the door. If objects became transparent the horizon could always be seen. This is illustrated on the opposite page.

THE VANISHING POINT


Now we stand between the two shiny rails and look along the track. These rails go on and on across the level plain until they reach the horizon where they are lost from sight in the distance.
We call the place where they disappear the vanishing point.

Diagram showing that the horizon is continuous

THE EYE-LEVEL


Now look down at your feet. There you see the track. Raise your eyes and look fifty feet beyond. You still see the track although you are not looking directly down upon it.


Then look straight ahead. You see the track as it climbs to a height level with your eyes and disappears at the horizon in the distance. This height can be called the eye-level.
Here the horizon and the eye-level become one and the same thing.

THE HORIZON AND THE EYE-LEVEL


Now sit down on the track and look about. You will find that your eye-level has lowered. The distant horizon also appears lower in order to meet this change of eye-level.


If we ascend in an airplane we shall find that the distant horizon rises with our height. It appears to remain at eye-level.
This accounts for the peculiar basin-like appearance of the earth when viewed from a great height.
We can now understand why the drawing of the corner of a room looks different when sketched from a low stool as compared with one sketched from the top of a stepladder.
The height of the eyes becomes a very important factor in freehand drawing.

REMEMBER
We use perspective in drawing a brick so that it appears as a solid object.
The horizon is that distant line where the earth and the sky seem to meet.
The vanishing point is the place on the horizon where the rails of the tracks appear to meet.
The horizon is the height of your eyes no matter where you are above the ground.
The eye-level is the height of your eyes no matter where you are.

PROBLEMS
Draw a brick, a box, a book. Do you know just why you draw it as you do?
If you are in level country or near the ocean look for the horizon. Experiment by looking from different heights: from the ground, from a window, from the top of a building. Must you ever look up or down to see it?
Locate vanishing points in things other than railroad tracks.
Make a sketch from the center of a level street with the sidewalks representing the two rails of the track.
STEP TWO

THE EYE-LEVEL AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO PERSPECTIVE DRAWING



THE EYE-LEVEL IS ALWAYS REPRESENTED BY A STRAIGHT LINE


You are seated sketching the interior of your room. Someone makes a mark around the wall the same height from the floor as your eyes. This mark will appear as a straight line across your drawing. It is the eye-level.
Notice in the drawing that the visible horizon seen through the window is the same height as the eye-level mark on the wall.

“THE EYE-LEVEL IS LEVEL WITH THE EYE”


The eye-level is level with the eye.
You may smile at the simplicity of the above definition, yet it is a surprising fact that it is ignored in practice even by professional artists. Its importance, however, is immeasurable.
Let us look into it.
On the preceding page is the drawing of the room corner; there are the pictures on the wall, the chair, the lamp, the window, and the drapes.
Now let us consider the lamp.
We are seeing the underside of the lamp shade; in other words we are looking from below up into the shade. Now let us look at the base of the lamp; it rests on the floor and it is necessary to look down upon it. The shade is above the height of our eyes while the base is below. Somewhere between is the eye-level, a place that is exactly the same height from the floor as are our eyes.
We show this eye-level by means of a straight line across the drawing.
We find that we have control over this eye-level line. We can look under the table and see the underside. We accomplish this by lowering our eye-level. We stand on tiptoe or step up on a box to see over the heads of people in a crowd. We do this to raise the eye-level. New pictures are constantly being formed before our eyes by our various ways of raising and lowering the eye-level.
It is interesting to watch for the effects and changes in a landscape when viewed from an automobile driven over a hilly road. Showmen have taken advantage of this fact and have built the Ferris Wheel, a mechanical means of swiftly raising and lowering the eye-level. The quick change of picture helps to intensify the experience.
We find that the objects we draw are in two classes: the ones that are above and the ones that are below the line that indicates the eye-level.
Now let us go into it further.

THE HIGH-WATER MARK


Imagine yourself wearing a diving helmet and seated in your room making a sketch of the interior. As you sit there the room is filled with water until it just reaches the height of your eyes. Now then; everything in the room that is under water is “Below the Eye-Level,” everything that is not under water is “Above the Eye-Level.” The “High-Water Mark” around the walls and on everything else that it touches in the room is “The Eye-Level” itself. No matter in what direction you look this high-water mark appears to your eye as a straight level line across the objects of the room.


When you are sketching outdoors this “water level” explanation will still hold true. Fences, buildings, haystacks, people, all have a “High-Water Mark” which is the artist’s eye-level.
If you are seated on the ground sketching, or if you are on a roof, the “High-Water Mark” explanation still holds true.

IMPORTANCE OF THE EYE-LEVEL

Eye-level above the table top.
Sketched while standing beside the table.

Eye-level below the table top.
Sketched while sitting on the floor.
It is easily seen that you would get two entirely different views of your table if you made a sketch while standing beside it, or if you sat on the rug and sketched the same table from that position.
The whole system of perspective drawing is based on the height of this eye-level; whether or not the eyes are above or below the thing that is being sketched.

REMEMBER
The horizon is shown by a straight line across your drawing.
In a room you can create your own horizon. This is an eye-level mark around the wall.
We look up to see things above the eye-level and down to see

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