Vanishing points in a picture are the parts that go into the background. If you ever looked down the road while driving or in the passenger seat, the road looks like it gets smaller and smaller in the background and just disappears. In a photo, it might mean there are many vanishing points.
I hope that helps!
Click on the link to your right for more information.
"DP" is the abbreviation of "Director of Photography."
Do you mean the 1971 movie " Vanishing Point "
Still life photography is the photography of inanimate subject matter (small group of objects)
Digital Photography Director of Photography Data Processing Digital Picture
Do you mean "Greek language"?If yes,photography=Fotografia=Φωτογραφία!
In photography noise means the extra space on the picture that is not needed.
vivid
Focal points refer to specific areas or elements within a space that draw attention and create visual interest. They are used to guide the viewer's eyes and emphasize certain features or aspects of a design. In photography, focal points are where the viewer's gaze naturally lands within an image.
dots per inch, but it's not a term specific to photography
What you may mean is "linear perspective." If that's the case, linear perspective is the practice of using a horizon line, vanishing points and grids drawn in perspective to portray things (especially buildings and cityscapes) in realistic proportions and to calculate feats of engineering. The person to really nail down the rules of linear perspective was engineer/architect Fillipo Brunelleschi. He is the one who came up with the iron-clad laws of vanishing points and perspective grids. This forever changed drawing and painting.
The answer is a little tricky. Let's say you want to draw a picture of a car crashing through a huge pile of boxes. Each box would have it's own vanishing point(s) and likely none of them would touch the horizon line. That would have more than one vanishing point, but wouldn't be "two-point" perspective. "Two-point perspective (proper) does mean that the points share the same horizon line.