A more canonical approach (edited) Readers of the canonical faith may suppress coordinates as follows.
Consider a $k$ - vector space $V$ of dimension $n+1$, its projectivization $\mathbb P (V)$ and its embedding $\mathbb P (V) \to \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ sending the point $\mathbb P (l) \in \mathbb P (V) $ to the point $\mathbb P (0\oplus l) \in \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$. The vector bundle $\mathcal O _{\mathbb P (V)} (1)$ then has as total space the open subset $T\subset \mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ obtained by deleting $x=\mathbb P (k \oplus 0)$ from $\mathbb P (k \oplus V)$ i.e. $T= \mathbb P (k \oplus V)\setminus x$. The fiber over $\mathbb P (l)$ [identified with $\mathbb P (0\oplus l)$] is $\mathbb P (k \oplus l)\setminus x$, a vector space of dimension one with origin the point $\mathbb P (0 \oplus l)$ but with no prefered isomorphism to $k$.
Elementary geometry It may clarify the above to recall that given a one dimensional projective space $\mathbb P$ over $k$, if you delete a point $x$ from it you get a one dimensional affine space $\mathbb P \setminus x$ and if you choose in it an origin, you get a one dimensional vector space, but that vector space has no prefered isomorphism with the vector space $k$.

