
Brass Compass and Pencil

by Bob Orsillo
Title
Brass Compass and Pencil
Artist
Bob Orsillo
Medium
Photograph - Original Fine Art Photography By Bob Orsillo
Description
Vintage brass compass with lead pencil drawing a circle on white paper. Abstract white on white background.
Original fine art photography by Bob Orsillo
Copyright (c)Bob Orsillo / orsillo.com - All Rights Reserved.
Buy art online. Buy photography online.
A compass or pair of compasses is a technical drawing instrument that can be used for inscribing circles or arcs. As dividers, they can also be used as a tool to measure distances, in particular on maps. Compasses can be used for mathematics, drafting, navigation, and other purposes.
Compasses are usually made of metal, and consist of two parts connected by a hinge which can be adjusted. Typically one part has a spike at its end, and the other part a pencil, or sometimes a pen. Circles can be made by fastening one leg of the compasses into the paper with the spike, putting the pencil on the paper, and moving the pencil around while keeping the hinge on the same angle. The radius of the circle can be adjusted by changing the angle of the hinge.
Distances can be measured on a map using compasses with two spikes, also called a dividing compass. The hinge is set in such a way that the distance between the spikes on the map represents a certain distance in reality, and by measuring how many times the compasses fit between two points on the map the distance between those points can be calculated.
Compass and straightedge construction is used to illustrate principles of plane geometry. Although a real pair of compasses is used to draft visible illustrations, the ideal compass used in proofs is an abstract creator of perfect circles. The most rigorous definition of this abstract tool is the "collapsing compass"; having drawn a circle from a given point with a given radius, it disappears; it cannot simply be moved to another point and used to draw another circle of equal radius (unlike a real pair of compasses). Euclid showed in his second proposition (Book I of the Elements) that such a collapsing compass could be used to transfer a distance, proving that a collapsing compass could do anything a real compass can do.
Uploaded
June 14th, 2010
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Viewed 7,704 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 11/28/2023 at 12:30 PM
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Comments (24)

Bob Orsillo
Vintage brass compass with lead pencil drawing a circle on white paper. Abstract white on white background. Original fine art photography by Bob Orsillo Copyright (c)Bob Orsillo / http://orsillo.com - All Rights Reserved. Buy art online. Buy photography online.

Marie Bulger
Bob, fabulous. My husband's father was a Civil Engineer and we Inherited his compass which looks just like this. Amazing and congrats.

Kirsten Giving
Hello Bob! Ah, this brings up memories of math classes, plus its very practical use when I need a good circle. I certainly wish I had such a beautiful one! Congratulations on your sale. f/v Kirsten

Marie Bulger
Bob, I couldn't believe it when I saw you had sold this piece. I have an old compass exactly like this that was my father-in-laws. Congratulations on your sale. It shows there are other people out there who have memories of these compasses and your photography is fabulous.

Andrew Hewett
This is just Classic ! Too Cool for School :) Awesome Photography Bob ! Well Done ! :)