How I do it is I keep practicing drawing squares whose tapers intersect far away, sure you can extend the canvas so you check at which point they'll meet, but if we're limited with the canvas size, figuring out the perspective by guessing is ideal.
Each box has their own vanishing points, yes, and it's you who will decide how you rotate the box, its kind of like playing boxes in blender and rotating them to form a circle.
One way to do it is to choose the angle of the bottom line, then build the squares from there
butter_waxx in the post "I dont understand how Im supposed to use the second vanishing point in the rotated boxes exercise, how am I supposed to know where they will end up?"
2022-06-22 11:36
How I do it is I keep practicing drawing squares whose tapers intersect far away, sure you can extend the canvas so you check at which point they'll meet, but if we're limited with the canvas size, figuring out the perspective by guessing is ideal.
Each box has their own vanishing points, yes, and it's you who will decide how you rotate the box, its kind of like playing boxes in blender and rotating them to form a circle.
One way to do it is to choose the angle of the bottom line, then build the squares from there