View allAll Photos Tagged NervousSystem
this is a clip - full video available at vimeo.com/nervoussystem/cellcycle
app at n-e-r-v-o-u-s.com/cellCycle
music is "Day Bird" by Broke For Free brokeforfree.com
Images from the Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, published in Russia,1890-1907.
Most images best viewed in the original (largest) size.
The book copyright has expired, so these images are in the public domain.
Here is the first ever kinematics piece 3d-printed in metal! This sample swatch was 3d-printed using direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) in 18k gold by Cooksongold in collaboration with A3DM. This piece was fully articulated straight out of the printer and did not require any assembly. We will be working on developing a special kinematics piece for DMLS gold printing later this year.
not a final rendering, this is our work in progress shot, I'll try to compose a better one with the rings in it later. (this one only shows bracelets)
Finally got my reaction diffusion pendant lamp from the amazing pair of Jesse Louis-Rosenberg and Jessica Rosenkrantz, the brains behind Nervous System.
A scanning electron microscope picture of a nerve ending. It has been broken open to reveal vesicles (orange and blue) containing chemicals used to pass messages in the nervous system.
Appears in the NIGMS booklet Inside the Cell. publications.nigms.nih.gov/insidethecell/
Credit: Tina Carvalho, University of Hawaii at Manoa
This image is not owned by the NIH. It is shared with the public under license. If you have a question about using or reproducing this image, please contact the creator listed in the credits. All rights to the work remain with the original creator.
NIH funding from: National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
a ceramic 3dprint testing out the new ViriShell material by Viridis3d
the piece has been fired but not glazed.
our booth at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair.
We exhibited our Hyphae lamp family which consists of one of a kind 3D printed LED lamps. And customizable tables created by our Radiolaria app.
The first piece of Kinematics clothing, a 3D-printed nylon bodice, will be debuted in New York City this week at the opening of the exhibition “Coding the Body” at apexart. The bodice is composed of 1,320 unique hinged pieces and was 3D-printed as a single part. In order to fit the bodice into the printer and minimize the space it took up in the machine, the design was printed in a flattened form that was designed with Nervous System’s “Kinematics” folding software. The bodice was wearable straight out of the printer; no pieces were manually assembled and no fasteners were added. The back features integrated 3D-printed snaps for fastening the garment.
my birthday self-portrait, a little late in the day.
necklace: a birthday gift from my Goldberg from the Nervous System shop on etsy! LOVE.
not sure if we will paint or clear coat these. we have to move them to boston flat pack so no finishing until we get there.
held together with wood joinery only, made on a homebuilt cnc router
The first piece of Kinematics clothing, a 3D-printed nylon bodice, will be debuted in New York City this week at the opening of the exhibition “Coding the Body” at apexart. The bodice is composed of 1,320 unique hinged pieces and was 3D-printed as a single part. In order to fit the bodice into the printer and minimize the space it took up in the machine, the design was printed in a flattened form that was designed with Nervous System’s “Kinematics” folding software. The bodice was wearable straight out of the printer; no pieces were manually assembled and no fasteners were added. The back features integrated 3D-printed snaps for fastening the garment.