The picture shows that the artist used a template/made a pattern and then flipped it over and traced it again, making a symmetrical pattern on the other side.
I think this is a radially symmetrical picture that was created by taking an image of some location from above and laying it beside itself 8 times in different positions.
drawing designs on a sheet of paper than tracing it over a bigger piece of paper and continue flipping it until you have that piece of art. -Olivia Boggess
This is a symmetrical drawing, and it is made by a pattern on a smaller piece of paper, flipped around the paper consecutively to make it look symmetrical.
It looks like this piece was made by taking a small section of a picture and then tracing over it while rotating and flipping it across the paper. -Hannah Pittman
This is a symmetrical drawing. It is made by first drawing a on a triangle and tracing the picture you want to redraw. then you will flip it over and the graphite from the first tracing will copy over and then you repeat the process. ~Mackenzie Johnson~
This drawing was probably made the same way that we are making ours in class: drawing a design and then duplicating it throughout the entire piece of paper so that it turns out to be radially symmetrical. _Bryce Little_
This piece looks like someone pulled an image off Google earth and fit it into a triangle. to make it radially symmetrical they probably used the same mirror image technique that we are using.
you start off by drawing the pattern onto a triangular sheet of paper then fold it over and over until it makes a symmetrical image covering the whole sheet of paper. This is what we are doing in class
this is a radial symmetry drawing.It was made by using a triangle piece of tracing paper and flipping it then tracing, just like we're doing in class - carsondingler
I think they first drew a whole picture just like us then found the coolest corner and traced it and then did what we are doing all the way around on a blank paper and then colored it
This drawing is radially symmetrical and is made just like the one we are working on in class. You start with a pattern and then flip it the correct way all around the paper. ~Jenna Dawson
I think the drawing was made like the projects we are making right now with radial symmetry. It appears that it is some kind of sky-view of a park or buildings. Caroline Harrison
I think it was made by first drawing out one pattern, then duplicating it around the entire piece, making it symmetrical.
ReplyDeleteThis is a symmetrical picture made by using one drawing folded over several times until the picture was complete.
ReplyDelete-Emily Garnett
This picture was made by drawing the same design throughout the paper making it symmetrical much like we are doing in class
ReplyDelete-Brantley Wilson
I think this drawing originally started off as one pattern, then was folded and traced around the page making it symmetrical.
ReplyDeleteThe picture shows that the artist used a template/made a pattern and then flipped it over and traced it again, making a symmetrical pattern on the other side.
ReplyDelete-Vivianna Chang
I think this is a radially symmetrical picture that was created by taking an image of some location from above and laying it beside itself 8 times in different positions.
ReplyDelete-Spencer Ennis
drawing designs on a sheet of paper than tracing it over a bigger piece of paper and continue flipping it until you have that piece of art. -Olivia Boggess
ReplyDeleteits made by drawing one picture on a triangle and then flipping it over consecutively across the page.
ReplyDeletemark estes
This is a symmetrical drawing, and it is made by a pattern on a smaller piece of paper, flipped around the paper consecutively to make it look symmetrical.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like this piece was made by taking a small section of a picture and then tracing over it while rotating and flipping it across the paper.
ReplyDelete-Hannah Pittman
This is a symmetrical drawing. It is made by first drawing a on a triangle and tracing the picture you want to redraw. then you will flip it over and the graphite from the first tracing will copy over and then you repeat the process.
ReplyDelete~Mackenzie Johnson~
This is a symmetrical drawing made by a drawing on a triangle flip around the page over and over until it is finished.
ReplyDelete- Anna Matthews
This drawing was probably made the same way that we are making ours in class: drawing a design and then duplicating it throughout the entire piece of paper so that it turns out to be radially symmetrical.
ReplyDelete_Bryce Little_
This piece looks like someone pulled an image off Google earth and fit it into a triangle. to make it radially symmetrical they probably used the same mirror image technique that we are using.
ReplyDeleteyou start off by drawing the pattern onto a triangular sheet of paper then fold it over and over until it makes a symmetrical image covering the whole sheet of paper. This is what we are doing in class
ReplyDeletethis is a radial symmetry drawing.It was made by using a triangle piece of tracing paper and flipping it then tracing, just like we're doing in class
ReplyDelete- carsondingler
I think they first drew a whole picture just like us then found the coolest corner and traced it and then did what we are doing all the way around on a blank paper and then colored it
ReplyDelete-Luke ford
This drawing is radially symmetrical and is made just like the one we are working on in class. You start with a pattern and then flip it the correct way all around the paper.
ReplyDelete~Jenna Dawson
I think this drawing was made just like how we are making our drawings in class. It looks kinda like a town square or a park
ReplyDelete-Daniel Paulin
I think the drawing was made like the projects we are making right now with radial symmetry. It appears that it is some kind of sky-view of a park or buildings.
ReplyDeleteCaroline Harrison
this has a repeating pattern through the drawing. it makes a cool desig
ReplyDeleteI think they made it the same way we are making ours. By drawing out one patter and then repeating it
ReplyDeleteI think it was a symmetrical drawing of one part of a campus. to make it, you just flip it and draw it
ReplyDeleteI think they repeated the same pattern repeatedly.
ReplyDelete-Levi Griggs
this is radial symmetry and used the same pattern and moved it around in a circle around the paper
ReplyDelete-Zack Carter
this looks like it was made the same way we are making ours
ReplyDeleteLundy Lader
its radial symmetry were u use one pattern and rotate it around a sheet of paper to make a picture.
ReplyDelete- hunter boyle
This drawing is radially symmetric and is drawn by using the same pattern over and over again.
ReplyDeleteWilliam Dasher- It is Radial Symmetry and is made by reflecting the pattern over
ReplyDeleteits radial symmetry and is done by copying the same pattern again and again
ReplyDelete-Ben Monfort
tracing a pattern and then copying the same pattern over and over again. then they colored it
ReplyDeleteit looks like an upward view of a city. -sophie seneker
ReplyDeleteit looks like a birds eye view of a building and a court yard -olivia boggess
ReplyDeletethey took a picture of something from the top and copied it over and over
ReplyDelete-Elliott Park
This picture was made by taking a picture from above, and then flipping it consecutively around a paper and tracing it.
ReplyDelete