Scale: 1 box = 5 feet

Reproduce the scale drawing of Tomas's front yard so that it has a scale of 1 box = 10 feet. Which shows the new scale drawing?

To reproduce the scale drawing of Tomas's front yard, we need to adjust the scale from 1 box = 5 feet to 1 box = 10 feet. This means we need to double the size of the scale drawing.

To create the new scale drawing, follow these steps:

1. Copy the original scale drawing onto a new sheet of paper or digital canvas.
2. Draw a grid over the original drawing, with each grid square representing 1 box (or 5 feet).
3. Double the size of each grid square by making each side twice as long.
4. Redraw the objects in the front yard by referencing the original drawing.
5. Maintain the overall proportions and dimensions of the objects as compared to the original drawing.
6. Label the new scale on the drawing, indicating that 1 box represents 10 feet.

The resulting new scale drawing will accurately represent Tomas's front yard using the scale of 1 box = 10 feet.

Unfortunately, as an AI text-based bot, I cannot provide a visual representation of the drawing. However, by following these steps, you should be able to recreate the new scale drawing.

To reproduce a scale drawing with a new scale, you will need to enlarge or reduce the dimensions of the original drawing based on the new scale factor. In this case, the original scale is 1 box = 5 feet, and the new scale you want is 1 box = 10 feet.

To create the new scale drawing, you need to double the size of each dimension in the original drawing since the new scale is double the original scale.

For example, if the original front yard was represented by a rectangle measuring 3 boxes by 2 boxes, it would mean the dimensions of the original yard were 3 boxes x 5 feet per box = 15 feet, and 2 boxes x 5 feet per box = 10 feet.

To create the new scale drawing with a scale of 1 box = 10 feet, you double these dimensions. So the new front yard would be represented by a rectangle measuring 6 boxes by 4 boxes, which translates to 6 boxes x 10 feet per box = 60 feet, and 4 boxes x 10 feet per box = 40 feet.

Therefore, to reproduce the scale drawing of Tomas's front yard with a scale of 1 box = 10 feet, the new scale drawing would show a rectangle measuring 6 boxes by 4 boxes.

Without a specific image or description of Tomas's front yard, I cannot reproduce the scale drawing. However, to create a new scale drawing with a scale of 1 box = 10 feet, you would need to double the size of each element on the original scale drawing.