. Augsburg's drawing, book 2. CHAPTER Cylinder. The cj^linder is the type form for objects containino; curvedlines and surfaces. For convenience, the study of the cylinder is divided intothe vertical cylinder^ Fig. 1 ; the horizontal cylinder, Fig. 2 ; thehorizontal-receding cylinder. Fig. 3, corresponding to the vertical,horizontal, and horizontal-receding The Vertical Cylinder. Models.— Use for a model a strip of rather stiff paper, 1^x9inches, l)cnt round, with the ends pinned or pasted, as in Fig. common fruit can, baking-powder can, and a plain cylindricalglass tumbler


. Augsburg's drawing, book 2. CHAPTER Cylinder. The cj^linder is the type form for objects containino; curvedlines and surfaces. For convenience, the study of the cylinder is divided intothe vertical cylinder^ Fig. 1 ; the horizontal cylinder, Fig. 2 ; thehorizontal-receding cylinder. Fig. 3, corresponding to the vertical,horizontal, and horizontal-receding The Vertical Cylinder. Models.— Use for a model a strip of rather stiff paper, 1^x9inches, l)cnt round, with the ends pinned or pasted, as in Fig. common fruit can, baking-powder can, and a plain cylindricalglass tumbler, all make excellent models. Use several we can see in one model what we fail to see in AUGSBURGS DRAWING. 93 Use both perceptive and conceptive knowledge in the study of thecylinder. Your general knowledge of the cylinder, and theknowledge derived from the model, should go hand in L (eye level) is the horizon line that marks the level of theeye.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectdrawing, bookyear1901