Point of View: The Art of Architectural Photography
Publisher: Van Nostrand Reinhold Company | pages: 202 | 1994 | ISBN: 0471284637 
| CHM | 10,9 mb

For those who are conversant with the language of architecture and perspective 
drawing, the title of this segment will be quite familiar. For those not 
architecturally literate, a worm's eye view in perspective drawing means that 
the horizon line and the baseline (ground line) are one and the same, as the 
name implies. Perspective, geometrically created three-dimensional drawings, is 
a science, and despite the advent of CAD (computer-aided drawing) we still 
create architectural views mechanically, to afford us the POINT OF VIEW from 
which to visualize a building. Architectural perspectives, delineations, or 
renderings, no matter the nomenclature, describe a method whereby we may 
simulate objects into three dimensions with single-dimension drawings. The 
types of perspective drawings most commonly used are: worm's eye, as previously 
described; eye level, where the horizon line is approximately 5 feet to zero 
above the ground line; aerial view, taken from above the ground line to emulate 
a bird's eye perspective, from any height, above the building.

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