To complete this worksheet, you need to think of common objects around your house or school that match each 3D shape. Here is a step-by-step guide to help you draw them:
1. Triangular Prism
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Shape: It has flat rectangular sides and triangle-shaped ends.
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Real-life object: A camping tent or a Toblerone chocolate bar.
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How to draw it: Draw a long rectangle for the roof of a tent, then add triangles on the front and back.
2. Cube
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Shape: It looks like a box where all sides are equal squares.
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Real-life object: A dice (from a board game), a Rubik's cube, or an ice cube.
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How to draw it: Draw a square, then draw another square slightly behind it, and connect the corners with straight lines.
3. Cylinder
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Shape: It has a circular top and bottom and straight sides, like a tube.
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Real-life object: A soda can, a glue stick, or a soup can.
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How to draw it: Draw an oval for the top, two straight lines going down for the sides, and a curved line at the bottom to match the top.
4. Sphere
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Shape: It is perfectly round like a ball.
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Real-life object: A basketball, a marble, or an orange.
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How to draw it: Draw a circle. To make it look 3D, you can add a small curved line inside to show shine or shadow.
5. Cone
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Shape: It has a circular flat bottom and comes to a point at the top.
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Real-life object: An ice cream cone, a party hat, or a traffic cone.
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How to draw it: Draw an oval for the base. Then, draw two straight lines from the edges of the oval that meet at a point at the top.
Final Answer:
Here are the real-life objects you should draw next to each shape:
1.
Triangular Prism: Draw a
tent.
2.
Cube: Draw a
dice.
3.
Cylinder: Draw a
soda can.
4.
Sphere: Draw a
ball (like a soccer ball).
5.
Cone: Draw an
ice cream cone.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of 3d drawing worksheet.