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I am in the process of illustrating a comic book that features a lot of bicycles. I've found that one of the more difficult things to draw by hand is a circle (the bike wheel) that is skewed in perspective.

Any tips on drawing circles / ellipses at various angles, and skewed in different ways because of perspective?

2007-01-19 04:56:17 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Drawing & Illustration

11 answers

A circle is perspective is always an ellipse on paper. If you know the angle (a) of the 3-D wheel in relation to the 2-D paper, the ratio of the short axis of the ellipse to the long axis of the ellipse will be cosine(a).

2007-01-19 05:01:29 · answer #1 · answered by Keith P 7 · 0 1

There is no reason not to guess where the vanishing points are, however while you do that it is a good idea to remember that drawing is as much about looking as it is about making marks. Assuming, as I am, that you are drawing a real building, try to figure out where the horizon line really is for you, and look at the transformations of the row of windows nearest it (and you). Deciding the image has a horizon line halfway up the building can make a very good glyph -- that is symbol -- for a building but it won't help you draw it because it won't help you look at it. Of course everyone will say you should use bigger paper. Always use the largest size you can. And if you can't then adding extensions is a good way to supplement it, but despite what people say drawing is always some parts on the right side and some parts on the left side of the brain -- it is a visual language which is useful for many ways of thinking, and occasionally an exercise like extrapolating vanishing points which are off the page can be very helpful.

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2016-04-16 10:13:44 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

First you have to determine if your circle is in 1point perspective or 2 point perspective.
The easiest way is to Draw a square in perspective and devide it into fours and then draw the circle inside the square where the circle touches the points where the lines deviding the square intersect with the square itself. Check out the first site below.

Another way is the 8 point tangent method which is kind of illustrated in the second site below.

2007-01-19 05:26:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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2014-08-30 19:08:28 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Start by drawing a square (in perspective) and then 'fill' the square with a circle, using each of the four lines as tangents. You can divide the big square into nine smaller ones for extra help).

2007-01-19 05:00:52 · answer #5 · answered by future_man_uk 2 · 1 1

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2016-04-28 02:09:08 · answer #6 · answered by meghan 3 · 0 0

1

2017-02-19 13:11:29 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

same as you do blocks in perspective, what you can do is draw the circules as ablocks in perspective too, then once you have the block in perspective you will know how to put your circle in ithat block, same way that you would do in flat block

2007-01-19 05:02:06 · answer #8 · answered by JUST ME 3 · 0 1

the circle is based on the square. start with the square, and if you continue to cut corners( make sure the corners are about the same size) you should get a reasonably round shape. if you want to measure the square, you can use your pencil and measure length and width. they both have to be equal.

2007-01-19 08:54:28 · answer #9 · answered by Teenager 2 · 0 1

the best way is imagine a square surrounding a circle. the points where the circle meet the square remain the same as does the centre point. skew the square then recreate the ellipse.

2007-01-19 05:03:30 · answer #10 · answered by Daniel B 2 · 0 1

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