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This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 737 pages of information about Leonardo da Vinci.
Purchase our The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci  Complete eBook
book on light and shade.—­On the shape of cast shadows (188—­191).—­On the outlines of cast shadows (192—­195).—­On the relative size of cast shadows (196. 197).—­Effects on cast shadows by the tone of the back ground (198).—­A disputed proposition (199).—­On the relative depth of cast shadows (200—­202).—­Fifth book on light and shade.—­Principles of reflection (203. 204).—­On reverberation (205).—­Reflection on water (206. 207).—­Experiments with the mirror (208—­210).—­Appendix:—­On shadows in movement (211—­212).—­Sixth book on light and shade.—­The effect of rays passing through holes (213. 214).—­On gradation of shadows (215. 216).—­On relative proportion of light and shadows (216—­221).

IV.

PERSPECTIVE OF DISAPPEARANCE

Definition (222. 223).—­An illustration by experiment (224).—­A guiding rule (225).—–­An experiment (226).—­On indistinctness at short distances (227—­231).—­On indistinctness at great distances (232—­234).—­The importance of light and shade in the Prospettiva de’ perdimenti (235—­239).—­The effect of light or dark backgrounds on the apparent size of objects (240—­250).—­Propositions on Prospettiva de’ perdimenti from ms. C. (250—­262).

V.

THEORY OF COLOURS

The reciprocal effects of colours on objects placed opposite each other (263—­271).—­Combination of different colours in cast shadows (272).—­The effect of colours in the camera obscura (273. 274).—­On the colours of derived shadows (275. 276).—­On the nature of colours (277. 278).—­On gradations in the depth of colours (279. 280).—­On the reflection of colours (281—­283).—­On the use of dark and light colours in painting (284—­286).—­On the colours of the rainbow (287—­288).

VI.

PERSPECTIVE OF COLOUR AND AERIAL PERSPECTIVE

General rules (289—­291).—­An exceptional case (292).—­An experiment (293).—­The practice of the Prospettiva de’ colori (294).—­The rules of aerial perspective (295—­297).—­On the relative density of the atmosphere (298—­299).—­On the colour of the atmosphere (300—­307).

VII.

ON THE PROPORTIONS AND ON THE MOVEMENTS OF THE HUMAN FIGURE

Preliminary observations (308. 309).—­Proportions of the head and face (310—­318).—­Proportions of the head seen in front (319—­321).—­Proportions of the foot (322—­323).—­Relative proportions of the hand and foot (324).—­Relative proportions of the foot and of the face (325—­327).—­Proportions of the leg (328—­331).—­On the central point of the whole body (332).—­The relative proportions of the torso and of the whole figure (333).—­The relative proportions

Purchase our The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci  Complete eBook
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The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.
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