There is orthogonal drawing with your front, side/s and back view of your object. Isometric and oblique for your overall view of the object. And explode to see how you project are connected together or assembled.
Each section of your thumb, on each side of the joint, is.
taking each side of the object and measuring how big and timing it to see what the answer is.
On the obverse (heads) side is an image of President Thomas Jefferson, and the reverse (tails) shows his home Monticello.
The application of reflection in real life is that it is used in vehicles in the rear mirrors. Also, in enlargement: it can be images which have to be resized to fit needs. In rotation Isometric drawing is used in IT and designing. When given multiple views such as side, front and elevated view, a figure is imagined and drawn. This includes rotation as the object has to be seen from various perspectives. Another example is a giant wheel which is rotating. The image on the side shows the above two examples.
A drawing that shows the appearance of an object when seen from side.
if you are referring to technical drawing Isometric drawings show three sides
A profile view (in mapping) is a drawing that shows an object as if you were looking at it from the side. It is like a side view of a house.
An orthographic drawing is one that uses a sort of perspective that does not portray an object the way it would look in a natural space. It shows each side of the object as flat and parallel to the "picture plane." It's not too unlike cubism. (Braque and Picasso explored drawing people and object by showing all sides at once.) This is used in order to give accurate engineering/mathematical dimensions. It is used for the fabrication of mechanical parts, furniture...
An orthographic drawing attempts to represent a 3D picture in a two dimension drawing. Usually shows a front, side and plain view
An orthographic drawing is one that uses a sort of perspective that does not portray an object the way it would look in a natural space. It shows each side of the object as flat and parallel to the "picture plane." It's not too unlike cubism. (Braque and Picasso explored drawing people and object by showing all sides at once.) This is used in order to give accurate engineering/mathematical dimensions. It is used for the fabrication of mechanical parts, furniture...
An orthographic drawing is one that uses a sort of perspective that does not portray an object the way it would look in a natural space. It shows each side of the object as flat and parallel to the "picture plane." It's not too unlike cubism. (Braque and Picasso explored drawing people and object by showing all sides at once.) This is used in order to give accurate engineering/mathematical dimensions. It is used for the fabrication of mechanical parts, furniture...
Front Elevation, Rear Elevation and Side Elevation.
The purpose of an orthographic drawing is to accurately represent an object in two-dimensional form using multiple views (front, side, top, etc.). This allows for a clear and detailed representation of the object's shape and dimensions for design and communication purposes.
There is orthogonal drawing with your front, side/s and back view of your object. Isometric and oblique for your overall view of the object. And explode to see how you project are connected together or assembled.
top, front,and side
isometric drawing create the illusion of 3 dimension by drawing the depth of the object on the both side.. in isometric drawing they are both set on the 30 degree angle..