Bird's-eye view
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A bird's-eye view is an elevated view of an object from above, with a perspective as though the observer were a bird, often used in the making of blueprints, floor plans and maps.
It can be an aerial photograph, but also a drawing. Before manned flight was common, the term "bird's eye" was used to distinguish views drawn from direct observation at high locations (for example a mountain or tower), from those constructed from an imagined (bird's) perspectives. Bird's eye views as a genre have existed since classical times. The last great flourishing of them was in the mid-to-late 19th century, when bird's eye view prints were popular in the United States and Europe.
Terminology
The terms aerial view and aerial viewpoint are also sometimes used synonymous with bird's-eye view. The term aerial view can refer to any view from a great height, even at a wide angle, as for example when looking sideways from an airplane window or from a mountain top. Overhead view is fairly synonymous with bird's-eye view but tends to imply a less lofty vantage point than the latter term. For example, in computer and video games, an "overhead view" of a character or situation often places the vantage point only a few feet (a meter or two) above human height. See top-down perspective.
Recent technological and networking developments have made satellite images more accessible. Microsoft Bing Maps offers direct overhead satellite photos of the entire planet but also offers a feature named Bird's eye view in some locations. The Bird's Eye photos are angled at 40 degrees rather than being straight down. Satellite imaging programs and photos have been described as offering a viewer the opportunity to "fly over" and observe the world from this specific angle.
In filmmaking and video production, a bird's-eye shot refers to a shot looking directly down on the subject. The perspective is very foreshortened, making the subject appear short and squat. This shot can be used to give an overall establishing shot of a scene, or to emphasise the smallness or insignificance of the subjects. These shots are normally used for battle scenes or establishing where the character is. It is shot by lifting the camera up by hands or by hanging it off something strong enough to support it. When a scene needs a large area shot, it is a crane shot.
Gallery
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Bird's-eye view drawing of Paris in 1850
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A view of central London
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Flying above the ESO's Atacama Large Millimeter Array site.
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Bird's Eye View drawing of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition 1909
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Aerial view of Disneyland in 2004
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Painting of Schiphol Airport by the Dutch artist Janneke Viegers
Bird's-flight view
A distinction is sometimes drawn between a bird's-eye view and a bird's-flight view, or "view-plan in isometrical projection".[1] Whereas a bird's-eye view shows a scene from a single viewpoint (real or imagined) in true perspective, including, for example, the foreshortening of more distant features, a bird's-flight view combines a vertical plan of ground-level features with perspective views of buildings and other standing features, all presented at roughly the same scale.[2] The landscape appears "as it would unfold itself to any one passing over it, as in a balloon, at a height sufficient to abolish sharpness of perspective, and yet low enough to allow of distinct view of the scene beneath".[3] The technique was popular among local surveyors and cartographers of the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
See also
Look up bird's-eye view in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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- Aerial landscape art
- Aerial perspective (disambiguation)
- Aerial photography
- Bird's-eye view map
- Camera angle
- Cinematic techniques
- Filmmaking
- Google Earth
- Pictometry
- Plans (drawings)
- Top-down perspective
- Video production
- Worm's-eye view
References
- ↑ Hurst, Herbert (1899). "Introduction". Oxford Topography: an essay. Oxford Historical Society. 39. Oxford: Oxford Historical Society. pp. 1–12 (4–5).
- ↑ Ravenhill, William (1986). "Bird's-eye view & bird's-flight view". The Map Collector. 35: 36–7.
- ↑ Hurst 1899, pp. 4–5