By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify 3D shapes and count their faces, edges, and vertices
  • 2Recognise and draw nets of cubes and cuboids
  • 3Draw oblique sketches of cuboids
  • 4Draw isometric sketches on dot paper
  • 5Identify top, front, and side views of objects
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Why this chapter matters
'Boxes and Sketches' helps children visualise the 3D world in 2D drawings. They learn about nets that fold into shapes, oblique and isometric sketches, and different views -- skills that are the foundation of geometry, architecture, design, and engineering.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Boxes and Sketches — Class 5 Mathematics (CBSE)

Based on the NCERT Math Magic Grade 5 textbook. Understand 3D shapes through nets and sketches, then solve the practice set without looking at the answers.


1. Why this chapter matters

We live in a three-dimensional world. Boxes, balls, bottles, buildings — everything around us has length, breadth, and height. This chapter helps students visualise 3D objects in 2D drawings. They learn about nets (flat patterns that fold into 3D shapes), oblique sketches, isometric sketches, and deep drawings. These skills are fundamental for geometry, architecture, design, and engineering.

2. 3D shapes

Three-dimensional shapes have length, breadth, and height. Unlike flat (2D) shapes, they also have volume.

Common 3D shapes

ShapeFacesEdgesVerticesReal-life example
Cube6 (all squares)128Dice, Rubik's cube
Cuboid6 (all rectangles)128Book, brick, shoebox
Sphere1 curved00Ball, globe
Cylinder2 flat + 1 curved20Can, pipe, roller
Cone1 flat + 1 curved11Ice-cream cone, birthday hat
Pyramid5 (1 square + 4 triangles)85Egyptian pyramid

Faces, edges, and vertices

  • Face: A flat surface of a 3D shape.
  • Edge: Where two faces meet.
  • Vertex: Where three or more edges meet (plural: vertices).

For a cube: 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices. For a cuboid: 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices.

3. Nets of cubes and cuboids

A net is a flat pattern that can be folded to form a 3D shape. It shows all the faces of the shape in two dimensions.

Net of a cube

A cube has 6 square faces. Its net is made of 6 connected squares arranged so that they fold into a cube.

There are 11 different nets for a cube. The most common ones look like a cross (T-shape):

  [ ]
[ ][ ][ ]
  [ ]
  [ ]

Net of a cuboid

A cuboid's net has 6 rectangular faces — 3 pairs of equal rectangles.

Example net of a cuboid (2 x 3 x 4 cm):

  • Top and bottom: 2 rectangles of 2 cm x 3 cm
  • Front and back: 2 rectangles of 2 cm x 4 cm
  • Left and right sides: 2 rectangles of 3 cm x 4 cm

How to check if a net works

  1. Visualise folding along the edges.
  2. Each face must connect to its neighbour.
  3. No face should overlap with another when folded.
  4. When folded, all edges should meet exactly.

4. Oblique sketches

An oblique sketch is a quick way to draw a 3D shape on paper. It shows the front face as a normal 2D shape and the depth as slanted lines.

Drawing an oblique sketch of a cuboid

  1. Draw the front face as a rectangle (true shape).
  2. From each corner, draw a slanted line to show depth (usually at 45° angle).
  3. The slanted lines should all be the same length (shorter than actual depth to create perspective).
  4. Connect the ends of the slanted lines to form the back face.
  5. Use dashed lines for edges that would be hidden from view.

Characteristics: The front face looks accurate, but the shape looks slightly distorted because parallel lines in depth are shown as parallel (not converging).

5. Isometric sketches

An isometric sketch shows a 3D shape more realistically. It uses isometric dot paper where dots are arranged in a grid of equilateral triangles.

Drawing an isometric sketch of a cube

  1. On isometric dot paper, draw a vertical line for one edge.
  2. From the top and bottom of this line, draw lines at 30° to the horizontal to show width and depth.
  3. Complete the shape by connecting parallel lines.
  4. All edges that are parallel in reality remain parallel in the sketch.

Characteristics: Isometric sketches look more realistic than oblique sketches. All three dimensions (length, breadth, height) are shown with correct proportions.

FeatureOblique sketchIsometric sketch
Front faceTrue shapeShown at angle
Depth lines45° angle30° angle
RealismLess realisticMore realistic
Paper neededPlain paperIsometric dot paper
Ease of drawingEasierRequires practice

6. Deep drawings

A deep drawing shows how objects look from different viewpoints — top view, front view, and side view.

Views of a brick

ViewWhat you see
Top viewA rectangle
Front viewA rectangle (different proportions)
Side viewA smaller rectangle

Matching views to objects

Activity: Place a cuboid on your desk. Walk around it. Draw what you see from the front, side, and top. Notice how the shape changes.

Stacking boxes

When boxes are stacked, the views become more complex.

  • Top view: Shows the outline of the arrangement from above.
  • Front view: Shows the height and width arrangement.
  • Side view: Shows the depth and height arrangement.

7. Activity corner

Activity 1: Collect 5 different boxes (medicine box, toothpaste box, matchbox, etc.). Open each one carefully along its edges to create a net. Trace the net on paper and label the faces.

Activity 2: Use isometric dot paper to draw a cube, a cuboid, and a simple house shape.

Activity 3: Arrange 4 cubes in an L-shape. Draw the top view, front view, and side view of your arrangement.

8. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Drawing a net that cannot fold into a closed shape Fix: Check that every face connects to at least one neighbour and that no more than 4 faces meet at any point.
  • Mistake: Confusing oblique with isometric sketches Fix: Oblique = front face is flat, depth at 45°. Isometric = all edges at 30°, uses dot paper.
  • Mistake: Forgetting to show hidden edges with dashed lines Fix: In sketches, use dashed lines for edges that would be hidden behind the front face.

9. Key facts

  • A cube has 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices.
  • A net is a flat pattern that folds into a 3D shape.
  • There are 11 different nets for a cube.
  • Oblique sketches show depth at 45°.
  • Isometric sketches use dot paper with 30° angles.
  • Top view, front view, and side view show a shape from different angles.
  • Hidden edges are shown with dashed lines.

10. Self-test

  1. How many faces does a cube have? What shape are each of them?
  2. What is a net of a 3D shape?
  3. Draw the top view of a cylinder.
  4. How many edges does a cuboid have?
  5. What is the difference between an oblique sketch and an isometric sketch?

11. Answer key

  1. How many faces does a cube have? What shape are each of them? Answer: A cube has 6 faces. Each face is a square.

  2. What is a net of a 3D shape? Answer: A net is a flat pattern made of connected faces that can be folded to form a 3D shape.

  3. Draw the top view of a cylinder. Answer: A circle (or a rectangle with rounded ends in a simplified drawing).

  4. How many edges does a cuboid have? Answer: 12 edges.

  5. What is the difference between an oblique sketch and an isometric sketch? Answer: In an oblique sketch, the front face is drawn as a true shape and depth lines are at 45°. In an isometric sketch, all dimensions are shown at 30° on isometric dot paper, giving a more realistic appearance.

12. Quick revision

  • 3D shapes have length, breadth, and height.
  • Nets fold into 3D shapes — practise visualising the fold.
  • Oblique sketches are quick; isometric sketches are more realistic.
  • Draw top, front, and side views to understand shape from all angles.
  • Collect boxes to see their nets in real life.
  • Use isometric dot paper to practise 3D drawing.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Cube and cuboid
Cube and cuboid each have 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices
A cube has square faces; a cuboid has rectangular faces.
Net
A flat pattern that folds into a 3D shape
A cube has 11 different nets.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Drawing a net that cannot fold into a closed shape
Check that every face connects to a neighbour and no faces overlap when folded.
WATCH OUT
Confusing oblique and isometric sketches
Oblique: front face true, depth at 45 degrees; isometric: all edges at 30 degrees on dot paper.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting hidden edges
Show edges hidden behind the front face with dashed lines.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Recall
How many faces does a cube have and what shape is each?
Show solution
A cube has 6 faces, and each face is a square.
Q2EASY· Concept
What is a net of a 3D shape?
Show solution
A net is a flat pattern of connected faces that folds up to form a 3D shape.
Q3EASY· Recall
How many edges does a cuboid have?
Show solution
12 edges.
Q4MEDIUM· Compare
What is the difference between an oblique and an isometric sketch?
Show solution
An oblique sketch shows the front face as its true shape with depth lines at 45 degrees, while an isometric sketch uses 30 degree lines on dot paper, giving a more realistic view of all three dimensions.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • A cube has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices.
  • A net is a flat pattern that folds into a 3D shape.
  • A cube has 11 different nets.
  • Oblique sketches show depth at 45 degrees.
  • Isometric sketches use 30 degree lines on dot paper.
  • Top, front, and side views show a shape from different angles.
  • Hidden edges are drawn with dashed lines.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 4-6 marks, depending on the school paper

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Shapes / nets2-31-2Faces, edges, vertices, and nets
Sketches / views2-31Oblique/isometric sketches and views
Prep strategy
  • Learn faces, edges, and vertices of common solids
  • Practise drawing and folding nets
  • Compare oblique and isometric sketches
  • Draw top, front, and side views

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Packaging

Nets are used to design boxes and cartons.

Architecture and design

Sketches and views help plan buildings and objects.

Spatial thinking

Visualising 3D shapes builds reasoning useful in many fields.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Count faces, edges, and vertices carefully
  2. Test whether a net folds without overlaps
  3. State the angle difference for oblique vs isometric
  4. Use dashed lines for hidden edges

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Find all 11 nets of a cube.
  • Draw top, front, and side views of stacked cubes.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 5 School ExamHigh
Maths Olympiad / IMOMedium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

A net is a flat arrangement of a shape's faces, joined along edges, that can be folded to make the 3D shape. For a cube, a net must have exactly six squares connected so that when folded, each square becomes one face with no overlaps and no gaps. You can check a net by imagining or actually folding it: every square should meet its neighbours edge to edge and close up into a box. There are eleven different nets that all fold into a cube.

Because paper is flat, we need clever ways to show depth. An oblique sketch is quick to draw on plain paper: the front face is drawn as its true shape and the depth is shown with slanted 45 degree lines, but the shape looks a little distorted. An isometric sketch, drawn on triangular dot paper with all edges at 30 degrees, shows length, breadth, and height in correct proportion and looks more realistic. Different sketches suit different needs: oblique for speed, isometric for accuracy.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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