This week, the Wedjat eye, or the eye of Horus.
To start you need a square, but make it a bigger square than you might usually use and find the vertical and horizontal axis.
On the left double square draw the diagonals.
Set your compass with the point on the bottom left corner of the square and the drawing point on the half way point. Arc down until you meet one of the horizontal lines.
Set your compass point on the bottom right corner of the double square. Set the drawing point to where the last arc stopped and arc to the edge of the double square.
Repeat on the top side of the square: set the point on the top left corner of the square, drawing point on the half line and then arc to meet the horizontal line.
Set your point to the top left corner of the double square and set the drawing point to where the last arc left off. Arc to the edge of the double square.
To draw the pupil of the wedjat eye, set your compass point at the center of the square and set the drawing point to the where the lines and arcs intersect and make a circle.
Next set the compass point on the bottom point of the pupil, set the drawing point at the top of the pupil and arc down to the horizontal line.
Repeat in reverse.
Next the eyebrow. It's drawn like the top line of the eye, but closer to the top (one probably should do it more scientifically than picking an distance that looks good, unfortunately I don't know any other way.)
Next is the little curly thing under the eye. I realized after doing it that it was facing the wrong way. It will still show you how to do it, you'll just need to flip it around. Actually, you could just draw the curly thing free form, this is just one way to do it.
Set your compass with the point in the center of the pupil and the drawing point to the right most point of the eye. Use this measure to make a square below the eye.
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Sacred Geometry: A Primer
Labels:
art,
beauty,
double square,
Egypt,
sacred geometry,
Sacred Geometry: A Primer,
square,
wedjat eye
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