tag 标签: sculpteo

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  • 热度 24
    2011-7-6 00:49
    1638 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    I mentioned in my blog a few moths ago ( The incredible shrinking Max ) a website from where you can order a miniature replica of yourself. This is obviously quite handy to keep around in case you forget what you look like (I find it invaluable myself ). But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let's start with the company, which is called Sculpteo . One of the things they offer is a 3D printing service, which you can use to create all sorts of things, from prototype enclosures for an electronic product (very useful if you are creating hobby projects) to ... well, just about anything really. For example, one of the services they offer is to create small 3D Avatars of people (check out the Avatar Introduction on their website). This is rather cool. You get a friend to take a couple of pictures of yourself – one face-forward and the other from the side. You upload these pictures to the Sculpteo website and their artists use them to create a 3D model, which is subsequently given a physical manifestation by means of a 3D printer. I've embedded a video from YouTube later in this blog showing the Avatar-generation process. Nick, my graphics artist / friend / expert / hero (I have to be nice to him because he keeps on helping me out on the graphics front) works in an office just down the corridor from mine. Nick used my camera to take a couple of pictures of yours truly, I sent them off to the folks at Sculpteo, and a few days later my very own Mini-Me arrived on my desk. I've just uploaded my own " Max Meets Mini-Max " video to YouTube. I actually think they did quite well considering how difficult it must be to capture the "Essence of Max" – those rugged good looks, that razor-sharp wit, the indiscernible sense of fashion... Nick kindly created a side-by-side image for me as shown above. I'm the one on the right (grin). Did you spot the fact that they've actually modeled my Hawaiian shirt? Personally I think the "Mini-Max" is really quite good, although I bet they could have created something that was almost photo-realistic if their artist had actually had the real me sitting in front of him or her. Does anyone really need one of these? Actually, I can think of all sorts of uses for them. For example, there's some TV news program called News Channel 10 that appears to have had Avatars made of all of their news and weather presenters, and they use these characters as part of their programs and in adverts for their program. Now, this is where I become a little confused, because there's also an incredibly powerful 3D sculpting program involved. Here are links to two tutorial videos ( video 1 and video 2 ). In these videos you see an artist manipulating what can only be described as a ball of "virtual clay" on the screen – pulling bits out, pushing bits in, stretching things, applying textures, applying colors, and ending up with an incredibly realistic crocodile-like reptilian head. The thing I'm confused about is who owns this software, where would one purchase a copy, and how much does it cost? The Sculpteo website is spectacularly uninformative on this point, with the result that I don't know if they created this software and are selling copies of it, or if they are using someone else's software, or ... well, I don't know. But whoever does own the software appears to have done a magnificent job. I would like to play with it myself, and I don't know anything about this sort of stuff. Also, I think that the folks at Sculpteo are doing a great job and they appear to be having a lot of fun at the same time, which is a really good trick if you can manage it!
  • 热度 21
    2011-7-6 00:48
    1954 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    Do you remember my blog of a few months ago – The incredible shrinking Max ? I mentioned there a website from where you can order a miniature replica of yourself. This is obviously quite handy to keep around in case you forget what you look like (I find it invaluable myself ). But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let's start with the company, which is called Sculpteo . One of the things they offer is a 3D printing service, which you can use to create all sorts of things, from prototype enclosures for an electronic product (very useful if you are creating hobby projects) to ... well, just about anything really. For example, one of the services they offer is to create small 3D Avatars of people (check out the Avatar Introduction on their website). This is rather cool. You get a friend to take a couple of pictures of yourself – one face-forward and the other from the side. You upload these pictures to the Sculpteo website and their artists use them to create a 3D model, which is subsequently given a physical manifestation by means of a 3D printer. I've embedded a video from YouTube later in this blog showing the Avatar-generation process. Nick, my graphics artist / friend / expert / hero (I have to be nice to him because he keeps on helping me out on the graphics front) works in an office just down the corridor from mine. Nick used my camera to take a couple of pictures of yours truly, I sent them off to the folks at Sculpteo, and a few days later my very own Mini-Me arrived on my desk. I've just uploaded my own " Max Meets Mini-Max " video to YouTube. I actually think they did quite well considering how difficult it must be to capture the "Essence of Max" – those rugged good looks, that razor-sharp wit, the indiscernible sense of fashion... Nick kindly created a side-by-side image for me as shown above. I'm the one on the right (grin). Did you spot the fact that they've actually modeled my Hawaiian shirt? Personally I think the "Mini-Max" is really quite good, although I bet they could have created something that was almost photo-realistic if their artist had actually had the real me sitting in front of him or her. Does anyone really need one of these? Actually, I can think of all sorts of uses for them. For example, there's some TV news program called News Channel 10 that appears to have had Avatars made of all of their news and weather presenters, and they use these characters as part of their programs and in adverts for their program. Now, this is where I become a little confused, because there's also an incredibly powerful 3D sculpting program involved. Here are links to two tutorial videos ( video 1 and video 2 ). In these videos you see an artist manipulating what can only be described as a ball of "virtual clay" on the screen – pulling bits out, pushing bits in, stretching things, applying textures, applying colors, and ending up with an incredibly realistic crocodile-like reptilian head. The thing I'm confused about is who owns this software, where would one purchase a copy, and how much does it cost? The Sculpteo website is spectacularly uninformative on this point, with the result that I don't know if they created this software and are selling copies of it, or if they are using someone else's software, or ... well, I don't know. But whoever does own the software appears to have done a magnificent job. I would like to play with it myself, and I don't know anything about this sort of stuff. Also, I think that the folks at Sculpteo are doing a great job and they appear to be having a lot of fun at the same time, which is a really good trick if you can manage it!  
  • 热度 17
    2011-5-8 18:46
    1651 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    I always wondered what it would be like to be six inches tall. I just saw a site that creates custom figurines. These look really tasty – I think it would be mega-cool to have a mini-me on my desk...   Do you remember that old science fiction file called The Incredible Shrinking Man ? Actually, I just found out that this was made in 1957, which was the year I was born, but we digress...   The idea is that Robert Scott Carey (played by Grant Williams), is a 6ft 1in tall businessman who is on vacation on a boat, off the Californian coast, with his 5ft 8in wife Louise, when he suddenly is contaminated by a radioactive cloud (I hate it when this sort of thing happens).   As an aside, Robert might have been able to save himself from his subsequent problems if he had had his own personal Geiger Counter, which makes me even more keen to get my counter up and running...   Anyway, in the film, Louise was below deck getting refreshments, so she wasn't affected. One morning, six months later, Scott notices that his shirt seems too big. He blames it on the cleaners. Then his wedding ring falls off his finger. Then other things start to happen.   Eventually Scott realizes that he's shrinking. This is dramatically illustrated when he looks his wife, previously six inches shorter than he, in the eye. Gradually Scott gets smaller and smaller – three feet, two feet, one foot, six inches ... and onwards (or downwards, depending on your point of view).   Anyway, as I mentioned, when I was a kid I always wondered what it would be like to be six inches tall. Of course I now hope that this will never happen, but it would be interesting to see a mini-me. Which brings me to a rather cool website I just ran across called Sculpteo.com where they create custom figurines.   It seems that all you have to do is upload two pictures of your head (a front view and a side view) and they can use these to create a 3D model of you. On the one hand I'm tempted toward the bare-chested Rugby Figurine (on the basis he has the 6-pack abs I used to have, so it would be a way of remembering days gone by ). On the other hand they offer a Custom Figurine – I wonder if they can do one in cargo shorts and a Hawaiian shirt, because this would more accurately reflect today's "me".   Maybe they have a special deal if you get the same head on multiple figurines (in which case I might be tempted to both versions). I shall have to make enquiries, so I must away...
  • 热度 18
    2011-5-8 18:44
    1846 次阅读|
    0 个评论
    I always wondered what it would be like to be six inches tall. I just saw a site that creates custom figurines. These look really tasty – I think it would be mega-cool to have a mini-me on my desk...   Do you remember that old science fiction file called The Incredible Shrinking Man ? Actually, I just found out that this was made in 1957, which was the year I was born, but we digress...   The idea is that Robert Scott Carey (played by Grant Williams), is a 6ft 1in tall businessman who is on vacation on a boat, off the Californian coast, with his 5ft 8in wife Louise, when he suddenly is contaminated by a radioactive cloud (I hate it when this sort of thing happens).   As an aside, Robert might have been able to save himself from his subsequent problems if he had had his own personal Geiger Counter, which makes me even more keen to get my counter up and running...   Anyway, in the film, Louise was below deck getting refreshments, so she wasn't affected. One morning, six months later, Scott notices that his shirt seems too big. He blames it on the cleaners. Then his wedding ring falls off his finger. Then other things start to happen.   Eventually Scott realizes that he's shrinking. This is dramatically illustrated when he looks his wife, previously six inches shorter than he, in the eye. Gradually Scott gets smaller and smaller – three feet, two feet, one foot, six inches ... and onwards (or downwards, depending on your point of view).   Anyway, as I mentioned, when I was a kid I always wondered what it would be like to be six inches tall. Of course I now hope that this will never happen, but it would be interesting to see a mini-me. Which brings me to a rather cool website I just ran across called Sculpteo.com where they create custom figurines.   It seems that all you have to do is upload two pictures of your head (a front view and a side view) and they can use these to create a 3D model of you. On the one hand I'm tempted toward the bare-chested Rugby Figurine (on the basis he has the 6-pack abs I used to have, so it would be a way of remembering days gone by ). On the other hand they offer a Custom Figurine – I wonder if they can do one in cargo shorts and a Hawaiian shirt, because this would more accurately reflect today's "me".   Maybe they have a special deal if you get the same head on multiple figurines (in which case I might be tempted to both versions). I shall have to make enquiries, so I must away...