Perspectiva corporum regularium

It was "the most lavish of the perspective books published in Germany in the late sixteenth century" and was included in several royal art collections.

[3] The book focuses on the five Platonic solids, with the subtitles of its title page citing Plato's Timaeus and Euclid's Elements for their history.

Each of these five shapes has a chapter, whose title page relates the connection of its polyhedron to the classical elements in medieval cosmology: fire for the tetrahedron, earth for the cube, air for the octahedron, and water for the icosahedron, with the dodecahedron representing the heavens, its 12 faces corresponding to the 12 symbols of the zodiac.

[4] The roughly 50 engravings for the book were made by Jost Amman, a German woodcut artist, based on drawings by Jamnitzer.

[8] A 2008 German postage stamp, issued to commemorate the 500th anniversary of Jamnitzer's birth, included a reproduction of one of the pages of the book, depicting two polyhedral cones tilted towards each other.

A copy of Perspectiva corporum regularium in the Metropolitan Museum of Art , open to one of the pages depicting variations of the dodecahedron
Great stellated dodecahedron enclosed by a skeletal icosahedron from Perspectiva corporum regularium
Wenzel Jamnitzer making a perspective drawing, as depicted by Jost Amman (c. 1565)