He made sketches and wrote comments. He never made the actual constructions.,
All kinds of people. People who find his paintings fascinating. The Mona Lisa is one of the world's most famous paintings of all times. Leonardo is also admired for his scientific research and inventions, which can be studied in his sketchbooks.
Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci were famous Italian fresco painters. Fresco's by Michelangelo can be seen in The Sistine Chapel. The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci is one of the most famous fresco's in the world.
He used paint which started running down the wall before the painting was finished.
That would be the Leonardo who hailed from Vinci, Italy. He could also write upside-down, right-to left, or left-to right, and did so on occasion.
The writing that appears backwards and upside down at the beginning of some chapters in "The Da Vinci Code" is called mirror writing. This technique was often used by Leonardo da Vinci, which is fitting since his name features prominently in the title of the book. Mirror writing requires the reader to hold the text up to a mirror to decipher it.
Yes and no. He wrote the idea in his notes and sketched it, but never made one. Ideas would come to mind and he would jot them down along with questions. He did this all of his life and 4,000 of them still exist today. Da Vinci was a man who finished few things in his life. Often he would start something and never finish it.
The way to reach the ledge to get the notebook (for Leonardo Da Vinci, 1516 AD) is by climbing to the top left of the Statue of Liberty construction and jump to the left.
No, he was commissioned by people. He had varying interests and a number didn’t include his paintings. He kept notebooks all of his life and wrote down questions and ideas.
His notebooks aren't necessarily a masterpiece (of literature). Leonardo's notebooks were actual notebooks, meaning that is where he sketched stuff, wrote down his ideas, drew his designs and even made notes about his personal finances. Leonardo's notebooks are a candid record into his life.
Go to the Leonardo da Vinci's workshop, and use the pulley system. Then try to jump and touch the medal. --- Go to Leonardo Da Vinci's workshop (4 o'clock, 1516 AD) and go to the wooden frame at top right. When you jump on the step with the ropes attached, the other step moves down. Jump over to that step, and it moves a small platform into the gap between the sides of the framework. Now you can jump down to that little platform, and jump hard to the right to reach the medal. It goes to Lewis and Clark (8 o'clock 1805 AD). * You can reach the medal more easily if you first recover Da Vinci's notebook (jump to the ledge from the top left of the scaffolds at the Statue of Liberty, 10 o'clock, 1882 AD). Leonardo will give you his glider wings.
If you mean paint (not draw), click the link below!
New inventions increased production and helped keep costs down.