Joseph Hooker, Charles Lyell, and Charles Darwin.
Writing on the Wall
Gourmet Uzbek Turkish
Books on Darwin
El Maizal
Girl with Red Hat
Young Woman seated at a Virginal
Standing on the edge of a cliff
Max Stirner
Tomati
A store
Nirvana
Charles Darwin on Music
Fork & knife
Map 12.1
Figure 4
Charles Darwin and his sister Catherine
Figure 8
Young Woman standing at a Virginal
Fig. 33
Interior with Woman beside a Linen Cupboard
Girl with Pearl earring
The Astronomer
Worlds in world
CLEOPATRA
“WOMAN IN BLUE READING A LETTER”
Monstera Deliciosa / Swiss cheese plant
A wilted leaf
Flower of Ladies finger / Okra
The Milk Maid
‘Cavalier and Young Woman,’
Cork
"Molyneux's Problem" / Shapes
Geographer
Spinoza
Diana and Her Companion
Active Eye
Dragon fruit
See also...
Clôtures de ce monde / Fences all around the world
Clôtures de ce monde / Fences all around the world
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
WHEELED VEHICLES & THINGS AROUND THE WORLD / VÉHICULES & MACHINS À ROUES AUTOUR DE LA PLANÈTE.
WHEELED VEHICLES & THINGS AROUND THE WORLD / VÉHICULES & MACHINS À ROUES AUTOUR DE LA PLANÈTE.
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Perspective
Perspective: the art of drawing solid objects on a two-dimensional surface so as to give the right impression of their height, width, depth, and position in relation to each other when viewed from a particular point.
Depth of Field: Depth of field is the area of acceptable sharpness in front of and behind the subject which the lens is focused. Put simply, it refers to how blurry or sharp the area is around your subject. A shallow depth of field refers to a small area in focus. Often the subject is in focus, while the background is blurred.
Depth of Field: Depth of field is the area of acceptable sharpness in front of and behind the subject which the lens is focused. Put simply, it refers to how blurry or sharp the area is around your subject. A shallow depth of field refers to a small area in focus. Often the subject is in focus, while the background is blurred.
Nouchetdu38, Léopold, Ulrich John, Paolo Tanino have particularly liked this photo
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More Technically, one-point perspective exists when the picture plane is parallel to two axes of rectilinear scene – a sense composed entirely in linear elements that intersect only at right angles. If one axis is parallel to the picture plane, then all elements are either parallel to the picture plane (either horizontally or vertically) or perpendicular to it. All elements that are parallel to the picture plane are drawn in parallel lines. All elements that are perpendicular to the picture plane converge at the vanishing point.
The introduction of perspective theory dramatically changed the way paintings were perceived. Previously, a painting was thought of as an opaque two-dimensional surface covered with lines and colours meant to be seen as symbols of three dimensional objects. After the enunciation of the principles of perspective, a painting was to be considered, in Alberti’s words, as a “window through which we look out into a section of the visible world.” ~ Page 79-
Interesting note.
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