They are parallel lines
Two lines that cross at a point are said to intersect. The point where they meet is called the point of intersection. If the lines are not parallel, they will always cross at exactly one point in a two-dimensional plane. In contrast, parallel lines never intersect and thus do not meet at any point.
The point at which horizon lines receding from an observer seem to converge.
its called the intersept point when they don't meet its called a parallel line
In linear perspective, the primary lines used are orthogonal lines that converge at a vanishing point on the horizon line. Lines that are not used include vertical lines, which maintain their direction regardless of perspective, and horizontal lines that run parallel to the horizon without converging. Additionally, any lines that do not relate to the spatial arrangement or do not lead towards the vanishing point are also excluded from creating effective linear perspective.
A point on the horizon where parallel lines appear to meet is called the vanishing point.
An accidental point is a point on the horizon at which two parallel lines appear to meet.
It is called the "vanishing point". Your question is about the usefulness of vanishing points when drawing horizontal lines in a painting, and the vertical features of whatever you are painting. It's something you learn in Art lessons.
They are parallel lines
An illusion. Parallel lines, by their nature can never come together.
Two lines that cross at a point are said to intersect. The point where they meet is called the point of intersection. If the lines are not parallel, they will always cross at exactly one point in a two-dimensional plane. In contrast, parallel lines never intersect and thus do not meet at any point.
The point at which horizon lines receding from an observer seem to converge.
its called the intersept point when they don't meet its called a parallel line
In linear perspective, the primary lines used are orthogonal lines that converge at a vanishing point on the horizon line. Lines that are not used include vertical lines, which maintain their direction regardless of perspective, and horizontal lines that run parallel to the horizon without converging. Additionally, any lines that do not relate to the spatial arrangement or do not lead towards the vanishing point are also excluded from creating effective linear perspective.
A line parallel to the horizon is called the "horizontal line." It represents a level surface and is used as a reference point in various fields such as art, photography, and geometry. In perspective drawing, the horizontal line often corresponds to the viewer's eye level.
Parallel lines in the Euclidean plane do not intersect but all parallel lines in the projective plane intersect at the point at infinity.
parallel