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Both are 3D view of an object. With perspective view, the far end of the object looks smaller (think "vanishing eye point"). With isometric view, the near and far end of the object looks the same.

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15y ago
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15y ago

A perspective drawing typically aims to reproduce how humans see the world: objects that are farther away seem smaller, etc. Depending on the type of perspective (1-pt, 2-pt, 3-pt), vanishing points are established in the drawing towards which lines recede, mimicking the effect of objects diminishing in size with distance from the viewer.

An axonometric preserves the dimensions of the object being drawn by pulling up the heights from the plan (bird's eye view) of the object and only distorting the angles of the image. This is useful when trying to represent an object for production or a piece of architecture.

For example, if a rectangular table that is 3 feet high, 4 feet wide and 8 feet long were drawn at a 1:1 scale as an axon where the viewer is positioned facing one corner (i.e. not looking at one side dead-on), the table top would be drawn as a rectangle (as the plan view of the table is a rectangle), the height would still be 3ft, width 4ft etc, but the angle between the table top and the table leg might be 30 degrees on one side and 60 degrees on the other instead of 90 (as it would be impossible to show the top and two sides of the table simultaneously without distortion).

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16y ago

isometric is 30o while axonometric is 45o. Hope this helps.

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14y ago

isometric view the lines in the axis are parallel dont converge. oblique view is vise versa of isometric view.

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12y ago

its the hipotanuse between the to drawings. so if u do it rite u wll see how good u r in the economic powerment

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12y ago
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12y ago

man dan ne ne yako

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Nice

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11y ago

alamin m0h

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Q: What is the difference between a axonometric drawing and a perspective drawing?
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What is axonometric drawing?

It is the plan view of your drawing rotated 45 degrees and projected upwards.


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