Control Depth on Paper with a Simple Box
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Control Depth on Paper with a Simple Box
courseThe Perspective CourseSelected 2 parts (116 lessons)
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Sandra Süsser
+100 quick random boxes from imagination. I am still way too impatient.
LESSON NOTES

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Boxes are the basis of complex perspective. Control three dimensions and you control depth on paper. We can see complex objects as a series of cylinders. Cylinders have complex curves that we best understand by reducing them to boxes and straight lines.

The Simplest 3D Form

Let us see how simply we can simplify form. A shoebox is proportionally complicated with different heights, widths, and depths. A sphere has a single curved plane. Curves are complex. Triangles are difficult to draw in perspective.

The most conveniently simple three-dimensional form is the cube. Boxes are made of right angles. Every line is at a right angle to each other line that it touches. The cube is even simpler because it is square all around. Every plane is a one-by-one square.

The Challenge of the Cube

Simple does not mean easy. Each plane is exactly the same size and shape. This is a hard criteria to meet. Squares tipped into space do not appear square due to foreshortening.

Mastering foreshortened squares gives you control over proportions in space. They solve the problem of field of vision. They help establish how dramatic you want depth to look. Constructing the most basic form in the world, the sphere, comes clearly by seeing the cube as its parent.

Methods for Drawing Cubes

Here is how to master the cube. Study it. Draw from it over and over. Imprint it into your brain.

Shapes First

Rough in planes lightly and loosely. Compare the shapes and eyeball the angles. Do not fuss over one plane so long that you forget it is only one part of the cube. See the whole cube as a thing. Let the line directions come from that view of the whole cube. This improves your perception of how squares turn into new shapes.

Get in the habit of fearlessly and freely beginning a sketch. Gradually hone your precision. This avoids a self-conscious and stifling approach. Judge your drawing lightly instead of harshly. See this as a process rather than a product. Delaying your commitments by gently seeking line directions trains you to see the correct lines in advance.

Line Systems

Start with the X, Y, and Z axes. Put down the three crucial lines that give you a front corner. That helps you find other corners at varying angles. Right angles now become acute or obtuse angles. This method relies on your knowledge of where lines go in space.

Construct Within a Circle

Cubes do not stray far from the ratio of circles. Start with a circular blob. Find your axes and seek convergence.

Receding Convergence

Boxes have parallel lines. When parallel lines go away from our face, they converge at a vanishing point. This is receding convergence. Lines aim away to unite like they should.

One of the most common errors in freehand perspective is drawing lines that do not look like they go away. We call this receding divergence. Lines spread apart instead of coming together. This is bad. It takes conscious attention to fix this until it becomes a habit.

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ASSIGNMENTS

Draw 100 rough cubes freehand. Add little arrows to show where each set of parallel lines is converging in space. Focus on making the lines feel like they recede toward the same point, not diverge apart.

  • Draw quickly and loosely
  • Don’t use a ruler
  • Think about line direction and convergence
  • You can use a real cube, make one, or use the Zolly app cube model

Deadline - submit by June 07, 2026 for a chance to be in the critique video!

Carlos Javier Roo Soto
Few!! The first 50 cubes and hopefully I'll be done with the rest by Wednesday. In the mean time I want ask for advice about how to kill the receding convergence more effectively, each cube took me from 3-5 minutes. I don't know if that's too quick or too slow enough for been roughs, and as you can see I have some troubles with keeping clean some of these. I think is because I was too focus I getting it right with me reference and, trying to remember what corners are acute and obtuse when they should be. But anyway I'll appreciate some advice to kill some of these errors before they become bad habits, or worse if they already are bad habits. In that case, any plan to deal with them is welcome.
Max Long
11h
100 freehand rough cubes done. Every one of them were done from the Zolly app. The convergence of the lines were something else. Getting the angles correct was essentially nonexistent. I don’t think any of them were perfect. I changed the routine up due to monotony for one page with the XYZ axis, and two other pages with the cross from the primitives section of the Zolly app. Also, I tried to convey the line weight as shown on the Zolly app. I probably need to do about 900 more rough cubes in perspective! 😧 I kept having memories of that time I had to write a thousand times about not talking in class without permission. But, I did learn from that experience, just as I have from doing this assignment. As always, critiques are welcome. Cheers!
@b1egun
2d
Some from imagination, and some Zooly app :D
Kassjan (Kass) Smyczek
Cubes, Cubes, Cuuuuubes!!!
Daniel Lucas Nizari
I suspect that I keep changing my horizon line for each set of free lines. I noticed that the smaller side of the cube convergence and also if you know a specific few sides, you should be able to mirror them for other positions. overal sometimes I feel my starting x y and z line are either in the wrong degrees apart or too long or too short
Lin
2d
Hey, that’s the exact issue I’ve been battling for a year. I can converge okay but the two families will go to two different horizons levels no matter what (when trying to make the box parallel to the ground), and you’re the first person I’ve met to name this issue so far. 😅 It does come from an improper expression of the xyz perpendicularity, I think? Because it lifts up a box corner almost like it’s sloped. That being said my brain can’t hold on to the HL no matter how hard I try or how many exercises I do. BUT I discovered in this assignment that learning how xyz (90 degrees) look in space and doing it intuitively is helping me far more than trying to figure out the HL. It’s an alternative route to arriving in the same place I think. If your brain is anything like mine, maybe focusing on the axes could be the way of this dilemma. I feel space like a 3D scanner in those sci-fi movies where you enter a cylinder and it scans you from top to bottom with an ellipse of light which changes openness based on how far it is from the HL. And each “level” looks a certain way. So I use this method to feel space. on a box if you draw an ellipse the points will be on that ellipse. If this resonates maybe this below will help (just the outer ellipse along with marshall’s sphere is enough imo) to keep the two families “level” - it is what made me be able to do it better after a year of struggle: https://youtu.be/wJ_k4aCknZYsi=Y0ygsK8riCYW_8pNv
Lin
2d
I feel like I’ve made so much progress in this assignment, more than all the others put together. I think it’s just all the cumulative knowledge kicking in? I’ve been focusing on the axes because that’s what my brain feels most in tune with. From imagination I can’t get the them quite right yet but I’m a lot closer there than ever before. I’ll try other zolly numbers and stacking them. :3
Lin
2d
A few from imagination with the zolly corrections on top:
Sita Rabeling
Yay! Now you conquered your biggest fear, like you called it earlier. 👏🏼 And what beautiful work came out of it 😍 Yes, I think too, this assignment gives a chance to make real progress. 💪🏼
Patrick Bosworth
Look at that teeny horse, I love it!! 🤩 These all look awesome, great work!
Ariadne Albuquerque
Jules Peppler
Awesome assignment. Thank you! If 100 cubes were not assigned I may have only went to 50 haha. A few months back i decided to exchange my phone for a sketchbook while taking public transit. When I have nothing to draw I always revert back to drawin' cubes. Ballpoint pen and paper is surprisingly addictive. Jolly good show!
Randy Pontillo
I can definitely feel the previous lessons kicking in. It's always fun realizing it all stuck!
@lucastoonz86
Hello just curious as to how you came to the conclusion of your angles looking “too acute” because I do think it is a believable enough three point box, is it because if they were opened up we would get more of that underneath feeling, maybe if the bottom overlapped the top more it would really feel underneath. great stuff
Norm Lanting
Marshall, I noticed that small objects close far in a room don’t go to the extremes of far objects close far - even if you go from across the room to a few inches from your face
Dermot
3d
Marshall thanks for the Drawing Boxes review video. I do need this as I've not yet mastered revolving boxes in all directions. I've drawn some freehand boxes to uploaad, to reflect where I'm at before I draw 100 boxes !
Fabian
4d
The first 50 were almost all a disaster. Then I concentrated more on the "seeing the cube as the parent of a sphere" idea and it got better. They're not pretty and there might be wrong angles here and there. So, I keep practicing this approach.
Pär
4d
Looks like you were improving good as you went along also :) And don't forget the directions for the third axis!, seems to be some slight tendency for divergence now and then on last page. And drawing out those arrows really help with that i noticed myself, also the drawing through makes good for checking and for feeling the volumes.
Stevie Roder
Can't wait to get started on drawing up my Cubes FreeHand for a try. Going to give my best to start out nice n slow n do about 5-10 a day till deadline and see how I go from start. This is gonna be fun. This is gonna be Cubelier.
Kai Ju
5d
I stopped doing the arrows at some point because they felt like visual clutter... I definitely started having more fun when I started stacking and tumbling and rolling cubes haha all from imagination
Jules Peppler
Spectacular!
Myles Goethe
Damn you really got jiggy with it XD
Sita Rabeling
😍
Carlos Javier Roo Soto
How much time should we spend on each cube? You said "Draw quickly and loosely", so is to make sure I'm not overworking it but also I'm not been sloppy.
Lin
6d
Only you know your sweet spot. For me I spend about a minute each, check where I went wrong, then another 30 secs or a min correcting and trying to understand:
Sandra Süsser
You are already overthinking. Just sketch mate
Huda Hijazy
This was fun!
@rupertdddd
I like your systematic approach - very good!
Michael Giff
Great job.... even if the rotated box exercise still gives me ptsd I must say it looks very, very nice here.
Pär
7d
Nice work!, and nice with the collected/gradual shift-kind of thing at the top, gotta try one of those :D
Sita Rabeling
Not as clean as I want it to be, but one day… 🎸🎵I think it’s going to work out fine 🎶 for all of us.
Michael Giff
Love the Lion Cube!
Sita Rabeling
Another 40. I wanted to do better today; more clean work and also try to draw cubes instead of boxes.
Pär
7d
Only starting here with the assignment, drawing from box made of cardboard, glue and tape with a nut glued on, and really good having the camera stand with the quick release button to adjust rotations. (Saw about the stand here on Proko, to use with the proko skull, in Michael Hamptons (excellent!) head construction course.) Nut with correct thread count for camera stand - UNC1/4" works best. Thought I'd move ahead of the naming directions-part, but overall trickier than I thought and I have a tendency to fall into the receding divergence trap. And this take on the freehand drawing of the cubes feels like it really is making me see and feel better the cubes on the page. So now I'm drawing circles and blobs and chanting 'up to the left' and 'down to the left' with a smile in my heart and for the first time actually enjoying just drawing cubes on a page. Seems this Marshal guy knows what he is talking about!! :o and I'm so so glad I'm doing this course. :)
Pär
4d
Okey, 55 done and 45 to go :). And trickier than I thought with the 5x5 gradual rotation grid, and there are quite some inconsistencies and bad proportions amongst the cube(ish)-shapes in there. But good help from adding the arrows, in order to get something to work from in order to bend the lines in shape! And to use when drawing through, that part which also reveals if it's too wonky or if it seems to work to some degree.
Smithies
6d
Ooh cool set up!
Anthony Hernandez
Smithies
6d
Great cubes!
Josh Drummond
My 7 week-old child has decided that sleep is merely a suggestion. So, in between rocking and feeding him, I've had all night to draw boxes. It's a nice break from gesture, at least. (Cubes are tougher to stack and queue than rectangular prisms/ boxes. Trying to keep all the sides equal is definitely a challenge.)
Smithies
6d
Congratulations Josh! I'm amazed you can still draw a straight line with all the sleep deprivation. Beautiful cubes too.
Sandra Süsser
So clean! Love it!
Kevin Riedel
Now you see cubes everywhere 🤣 ... congratulation for having your child (sorry, I really don't know, how to say this in English - in German we say something like 'heartfelt congratulations')
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