Easy — Perspective Made

: Use "height lines" to scale people correctly in a scene. For example, all people of the same height standing on a level street will have their heads align with the same vanishing point if they are on the same "height wall". Perspective Made Super Easy

: This is the point on the horizon where parallel lines (like train tracks) appear to meet. Perspective Made Easy

: Study how vanishing points shift along the horizon as you turn a cube. : Use "height lines" to scale people correctly in a scene

Perspective Made Easy by Ernest R. Norling is a foundational guide for artists that simplifies the complex rules of spatial drawing. First published in 1939, it uses over 250 simple line drawings to demystify technical concepts like vanishing points and eye levels, making them accessible even to beginners with no prior experience. Core Concepts to Master : Study how vanishing points shift along the

: The most critical rule is that the horizon always sits exactly at your eye level. Whether you are standing on a hill or lying on the ground, the horizon shifts with you.

: Objects and the gaps between them (foreshortening) become narrower and smaller as they move away from the viewer. Key Learning Exercises

: Practice finding the horizon line in photographs or real-world interiors to see how it affects the slope of furniture and walls.