And another perspective drawing. This took me forever and a half until I wanted to throw it out the window. Sad, because its such a pretty room with such bold, strong lines and symmetry and I wasn’t able to capture that essence at all here. I found myself reverting to symbols a lot - like on the chairs, table, and chandelier - rather than actually drawing what I was seeing. I think maybe that’s the mode I revert to when I get tired and just want to be done already. The result, it looks like your typical, boring dining room rather than the rather nifty room that it actually is - you know, the thing that inspired me to draw it in the first place. :sad:
Perspective Drawing (my dining room)

On the other hand, I got to play lots with shading here. Yikes, ran out of significantly contrasting shades until everything started running together. Actually went back with my eraser to lighten some things and also to put a little space in between the items (primarily with the center chair) so that they didn’t run together.
If nothing else, I think I did a good job with perspective (you remember, the point of the exercise
). So, not all is lost.


). I like your suggestion on perspective, I think I get very caught up in the minutia and miss the big picture. When I finished it, I noticed it looks like the table is sort of squished at the back of the rug rather than centered on it, but I was totally oblivious to this while I was drawing it. I think if I look at things as above/below the horizon, that will help - and also maybe help me to remember to look at the 









