first angle projection and third angle projection.
1st angle and third angle projection
There are three types of Pictorial Drawing: Isometric Drawing Perspective Drawing Oblique Drawing
Isometric, orthographic and oblique drawings.
Oblique drawings are designed to show a three dimensional view of an object. It is a kind of a drawing that shows one face of the object in true shape, but the other faces on a distorted angle. Oblique is not really a '3D' system but a 2 dimensional view of an object with 'forced depth'.
Isometric Drawing: keeps the scale the same along each axis of the drawing, use mostly in engineering. Oblique Drawing: is a type of parallel projection of an object to give it a sort of 3D effect on paper, a much simpler form of drawing.
Drawing in "oblique perspective" means drawing in a way the has a slanted perspective to show multiple sides often seen in eastern artwroks of antiquity. This differs from orthographic perspective (IE silhouettes) which were used in many classical Greeks and Roman artworks and point-perspective (IE 20th Century Fox logo) which was popular during the renaissance and after in the west.
There are three types of Pictorial Drawing: Isometric Drawing Perspective Drawing Oblique Drawing
Isometric, orthographic and oblique drawings.
Oblique drawings are designed to show a three dimensional view of an object. It is a kind of a drawing that shows one face of the object in true shape, but the other faces on a distorted angle. Oblique is not really a '3D' system but a 2 dimensional view of an object with 'forced depth'.
oblique
30 Degrees
There is orthogonal drawing with your front, side/s and back view of your object. Isometric and oblique for your overall view of the object. And explode to see how you project are connected together or assembled.
Isometric Drawing: keeps the scale the same along each axis of the drawing, use mostly in engineering. Oblique Drawing: is a type of parallel projection of an object to give it a sort of 3D effect on paper, a much simpler form of drawing.
No.
Drawing in "oblique perspective" means drawing in a way the has a slanted perspective to show multiple sides often seen in eastern artwroks of antiquity. This differs from orthographic perspective (IE silhouettes) which were used in many classical Greeks and Roman artworks and point-perspective (IE 20th Century Fox logo) which was popular during the renaissance and after in the west.
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One remaining drawing conventions is Oblique drawing - In this convention the angles used are 45 degrees and 90 degrees. The only difference between the two named styles is in the scale of the dimension going away from the viewer. This first example is Cavalier Oblique and shows the full scale (1:1) in the axis Cabinet Oblique' In Cabinet oblique the scale (depth) is halved whilst in Cavalier oblique the depth scale is the same as in the X and Y directions.
Oblique and Obtuse