The Elements of Seeing Picture Plane Ground Plane Horizon Line

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© Taylor & Francis Group

SIMPLIFYING PERSPECTIVE What Seeing Looks Like (Part 1)

© Taylor & Francis Group

Overview Center of Vision Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level) Line Of Sight (Distance Line)

Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• Perspective is about both how we see and what we’re looking at. • Once you fully understand the following terms and ideas, working with perspective will make a lot more sense and become a lot easier.

© Taylor & Francis Group

The Viewer Center of Vision Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level) Line Of Sight (Distance Line)

Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• We draw what the viewer sees. If the viewer moves, our picture changes. • In one and two-point perspective, the viewer will always be looking straight ahead. In three-point perspective, we decide on the viewer’s angle of sight. Either way, we’re controlling the viewer’s angle or direction of view.

© Taylor & Francis Group

The Ground Plane Center of Vision Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level) Line Of Sight (Distance Line)

Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• The ground plane is our starting point when measuring height. Think of it as the ground itself. • To measure height, we go up from the ground plane to the viewer’s eyes, no matter where they happen to be. That means if our viewer is standing on a ladder, we measure from the ground plane up to the height of his eyes.

© Taylor & Francis Group

The Picture Plane Center of Vision

Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level) Line Of Sight (Distance Line)

Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• Think of the picture plane as an imaginary, neverending piece of glass. • The viewer always looks through the picture plane at a 90 degree angle. • We collect all of the information for our drawing at the picture plane.

© Taylor & Francis Group

The Elements of Seeing Center of Vision Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level)

Line of Sight Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• Seeing starts at the viewer’s eye (the station point), travels towards the picture plane (as the line of sight) and meets the picture plane at the center of vision. • We use the station point, line of sight and center of vision to measure distance to the picture plane.

© Taylor & Francis Group

The Horizon Line Center of Vision Picture Plane

Your Drawing

Horizon Line (Eye Level) Line Of Sight (Distance Line)

Station Point

Viewer

Ground Plane

• Even though the horizon seems as though it’s where the earth and sky meet, it really represents the viewer’s eye level. It’s just what eye level looks like in the distance, as far as the eye can see. • Since the horizon line alway’s represents the viewer’s eye level, we use the distance from the ground plane to the horizon line to measure height.

© Taylor & Francis Group

For more information, visit: www.simplifyingperspective.com

© Robert Pastrana