I’m sure it is to you but not to the illustrators and physicists/mathematicians I have asked so far, the later being very interested in the question while the former claimed it simply wouldn’t have 3 vanishing points and to think about it would be a waste of time, so thank you very much for your...
Well but then you could also say the room isn’t accurate because it consists of straight lines. The human eye, its distortions and all the error of perception aren’t accurate in any way, we got that out of the way. The question is, does a 3-point-p. object work with a 1-point-p. room or are they...
Please excuse the delay of my reply. I made this video to illustrate my question unfortunately I’m not allowed to post a link to it yet.
The URL is
www. vimeo .com [Slash] 43313385
Sorry for the crappy voice!
Right, that’s why I’m asking in regard to the idealized representation of a perfect 1-point-perspective room. Are there any “rules” for objects which are not following this one vanishing point or is combining these ways of visual representation in a coherent way impossible?
Thanks for your quick reply.
Lucky me!
My goal is not to get the vanishing points into the frame. My goal is to have objects inside the room that follow 1, 2 and 3 vanishing points. It’s fine if those lay way outside the image.
But I want the scene to incorporate only linear perspective, no...
Thanks a lot for your time, I assume this is the correct subforum for my question, if not, please excuse my mistake.
Is it possible to have a 1-, a 2- and a 3-vanishing-point perspective object in one room? I’d like to know this out of curiosity and for understanding and teaching drawing.
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