it is porportion
A scale drawing!
Oh, what a delightful question! To find the scale of the drawing, we simply need to divide the height of the real giraffe (5.5 meters) by the height of the drawing (7 centimeters). This will give us the scale of the drawing, which in this case is 1:78. Isn't that just lovely? Just remember, there are no mistakes in art, only happy little accidents.
The scale would be 48:1
If you are drawing something say in a 1/10 scale or a 1:10 scale, this will make the lines in your picture or map 10 times smaller than in real life
If they did not their drawings would be the same size as the structure that they are building which would make it impossible to work with them!
A scale drawing!
A scale drawing.
Scale is how much smaller(or bigger) the drawing is compared to the real object. It'd be real awkward if you were drawing a house to have to make the drawing as big as the house would be. But for the drawing to work out you need to know how to translate between the drawing and reality - so you decide something. Scale 1:12 for instance would mean that something that's one inch in the drawing would be one foot in reality.
Tell me the answer synonomys
In the eyepiece, you see the object you're observing at a much larger scale—but no, it doesn't make things bigger in reality.
First you have to measure the object you want to draw. You should compare two parts of the object, such as height and width as in the width of a glass versus its height, or how many times a small part of the object fits within a larger part, such as in the human body and the head. The smaller part should be the measure unit you use to compare to the bigger part. Then you decide the size you want to give the object in your drawing. You make a draft of the object's contour. You measure your drawing's width versus its height and decide if the scale coincides with your model. If it does, then you add the details.
In biology you are often required to make a drawing of an organism or structure. The drawing should include the magnification or how many times larger (or smaller) the drawing is than the actual object. You can calculate the magnification by dividing the size of the object drawn on the page by the size of the actual object. Don't forget to make sure they are in the same units! for example: drawing 5 cm/ actual cell 5 um X 10,000 um/1 cm = 10,000 x magnification
To weigh objects on a scale, place the object you want to weigh on the scale platform. Make sure the scale is set to zero before placing the object. The scale will then display the weight of the object.
Oh, what a delightful question! To find the scale of the drawing, we simply need to divide the height of the real giraffe (5.5 meters) by the height of the drawing (7 centimeters). This will give us the scale of the drawing, which in this case is 1:78. Isn't that just lovely? Just remember, there are no mistakes in art, only happy little accidents.
An engineer's scale is a special kind of ruler used in engineering drafting, such as for blueprints. The scale helps to make drawings that are a certain ratio of the size of the original. For example, 1:10 scale would produce a drawing that is one tenth the size of the original object.
Enlarge it?
An observational drawing is a drawing were you observe an object or drawing and try and make it look as close to the real thing as possible.