2-a-week

friendship group - everybody is welcome

One-Point Perspective - 15th of April

This challenge closed about 2 years ago.

The Challenge

The cover is good example for this challenge, but if somebody wonder what One-point perspective mean, I will post here the definition from wikipedia:
One vanishing point is typically used for roads, railway tracks, hallways, or buildings viewed so that the front is directly facing the viewer. Any objects that are made up of lines either directly parallel with the viewer’s line of sight or directly perpendicular (the railroad slats) can be represented with one-point perspective.

One-point perspective exists when the painting plate (also known as the picture plane) is parallel to two axes of a rectilinear (or Cartesian) scene — a scene which is composed entirely of linear elements that intersect only at right angles. If one axis is parallel with the picture plane, then all elements are either parallel to the painting plate (either horizontally or vertically) or perpendicular to it. All elements that are parallel to the painting plate are drawn as parallel lines. All elements that are perpendicular to the painting plate converge at a single point (a vanishing point) on the horizon.

Judging / Voting Criteria

Give your vote for the most unusual picture.

Rewards & Prizes

The winner will get group avatar.
The artist will be member feature.

Cover Image

Early morning, Coniston Jetty by Jason Connolly

Challenge completed

The Top Ten

The Vanishing Point by Tim Mannle

The Vanishing Point by Tim Mannle was voted the most popular entry in this challenge with 6 votes.

  • Tunnel Vision by Gayle Dolinger
  • station... by sendao
  • Colorful Path by RonSparks
  • Walkway by Graham Schofield
  • A Foggy Evening on the Wharf by Kristina Gale
  • St James's Park, Autumn by Themis
  • Secret passageway by Christine Oakley
  • No, I won't get up... by Stefanie Köppler
  • Whisps of Air amongst the Strands of Grass (and this is WINTER!) by Mark Elshout

Browse All Entries

There were no entries in this challenge