You don`t need a perspective match for a chair man, just eyeball it.
Most of the times, no. I did however like this approach that Grant showed. Especially when you got those odd angled images only and can't really see the depth of things and you want to try to hit true to original image. I did get it to work in the end, but it kept behaving oddly. Had to move the camera manually in top view while messing with the perspective lines. Strange.
@Huffer If you see that first image I posted. In a different view I manually moved the camera over to the other side in top view until it started to tilt the right way. I also used the camera settings in the perspective match dialog along with doing this: vertical, horizonal etc. Some back and forth with this and I got it lined up in the end. But when I moved the lines alone, it had a tendency to flip out on me.
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If you see that first image I posted. In a different view I manually moved the camera over to the other side in top view until it started to tilt the right way. I also used the camera settings in the perspective match dialog along with doing this: vertical, horizonal etc. Some back and forth with this and I got it lined up in the end. But when I moved the lines alone, it had a tendency to flip out on me.