View allAll Photos Tagged digitizing
The MakerBot Digitizer 3D-scanned Laser Cat model was used in this test of different layer thicknesses. The cat was scaled down to 50 mm in height and then 3D printed at the following layer heights:
- 0.40 mm (400 microns)
- 0.30 mm (300 microns)
- 0.20 mm (200 microns)
- 0.10 mm (100 microns) - Average width of a strand of human hair
- 0.05 mm (50 microns)
- 0.02 mm (20 microns)
All six cats where 3D printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 with TRUE BLUE PLA plastic at 230 degrees C.
All layers where 3D printed with MakerWare's standard values as follows:
(400 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(300 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(200 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(100 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(50 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 60 mm/s
(20 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 40 mm/s
---
The 3D scanner: bit.ly/1a7y8hG
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D model: www.thingiverse.com/thing:146265
Custom hand-drawn visualizations for the new strategic business plan of Europeana.eu. For presentations, website and digital/print media. Febr-May 2014
The MakerBot Digitizer 3D-scanned Laser Cat model was used in this test of different layer thicknesses. The cat was scaled down to 50 mm in height and then 3D printed at the following layer heights:
- 0.40 mm (400 microns)
- 0.30 mm (300 microns)
- 0.20 mm (200 microns)
- 0.10 mm (100 microns) - Average width of a strand of human hair
- 0.05 mm (50 microns)
- 0.02 mm (20 microns)
All six cats where 3D printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 with TRUE BLUE PLA plastic at 230 degrees C.
All layers where 3D printed with MakerWare's standard values as follows:
(400 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(300 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(200 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(100 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(50 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 60 mm/s
(20 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 40 mm/s
---
The 3D scanner: bit.ly/1a7y8hG
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D model: www.thingiverse.com/thing:146265
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M3 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Kodak TriX 400
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
I've lost track of how many months this took me, but I finally accomplished one of my many space-saving goals of digitizing all my VHS tapes. All these tapes fit onto this teeny little external hard disk with a few hundred GB to spare -- all without losing any of the (minimal) quality of the originals.
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M3 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Kodak TriX 400
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Diversity: Digitized In The Game Tour @ Capital FM Arena, on April 03rd, 2012 in Nottingham, United Kingdom
A LOT more photographs of Diversity to come soon....
© Ollie Millington.
All rights reserved. Use without permission is illegal !
You can see my best photographs of 2011 by clicking
here .
My Website currently undergoing a facelift...
at the World Economic Forum - Annual Meeting of the New Champions in Tianjin, People's Republic of China 2016. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Jakob Polacsek
Digitized Document from our Collection-----Please tag these photos so information can be recorded.---Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
We're delighted to announce that we've digitised another two years of the Dublin City Electoral Lists and the entries for 1908, 1909 and 1910 are now fully searchable at www.dublinheritage.ie - a great resource for family history, local history and social history, the database now contains 160,600 records
The electoral lists are a unique record of Dubliners during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
In our Dublin City Electoral Lists project we plan to digitise all of the Dublin City Council Electoral Lists 1898-1916 - part of the City Council's activities during the Decade of Commemorations.
(1 May 2014)
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M6 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Kodak TriX 400
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Aakar Patel, Executive Director, Amnesty International, India at the India Economic Summit 2016 in New Delhi, India, Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
Digitized from a 1997 Kodak Gold negative film using a Canon R5 in 2024…….27 years later. The original film was photographed with a Canon EOS Elan
A petroglyph is an image created on rock by scraping or in other ways creating that image in the rock surface. They are found world-wide and are usually associated with ancient peoples but these petroglyphs range from as old as 16,000 years and some are estimated to be as recent as the 1800s.
Found in a protected canyon in the Mojave Desert of California situated on a US Military base.
Image - Copyright 2024 Alan Vernon
The MakerBot Digitizer 3D-scanned Laser Cat model was used in this test of different layer thicknesses. The cat was scaled down to 50 mm in height and then 3D printed at the following layer heights:
- 0.40 mm (400 microns)
- 0.30 mm (300 microns)
- 0.20 mm (200 microns)
- 0.10 mm (100 microns) - Average width of a strand of human hair
- 0.05 mm (50 microns)
- 0.02 mm (20 microns)
All six cats where 3D printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 with TRUE BLUE PLA plastic at 230 degrees C.
All layers where 3D printed with MakerWare's standard values as follows:
(400 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(300 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(200 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(100 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(50 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 60 mm/s
(20 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 40 mm/s
---
The 3D scanner: bit.ly/1a7y8hG
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D model: www.thingiverse.com/thing:146265
We're delighted to announce that we've digitised another two years of the Dublin City Electoral Lists and the entries for 1908, 1909 and 1910 are now fully searchable at www.dublinheritage.ie - a great resource for family history, local history and social history, the database now contains 160,600 records
The electoral lists are a unique record of Dubliners during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
In our Dublin City Electoral Lists project we plan to digitise all of the Dublin City Council Electoral Lists 1898-1916 - part of the City Council's activities during the Decade of Commemorations.
(1 May 2014)
One of my earliest map fragments. The language seems very primitive. No different than cave paintings...
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M6 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Kodak TriX 400
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
The MakerBot Digitizer 3D-scanned Laser Cat model was used in this test of different layer thicknesses. The cat was scaled down to 50 mm in height and then 3D printed at the following layer heights:
- 0.40 mm (400 microns)
- 0.30 mm (300 microns)
- 0.20 mm (200 microns)
- 0.10 mm (100 microns) - Average width of a strand of human hair
- 0.05 mm (50 microns)
- 0.02 mm (20 microns)
All six cats where 3D printed on a MakerBot Replicator 2 with TRUE BLUE PLA plastic at 230 degrees C.
All layers where 3D printed with MakerWare's standard values as follows:
(400 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(300 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(200 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(100 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 90 mm/s
(50 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 60 mm/s
(20 microns) - 15% infill - perimeters 2 - speed 40 mm/s
---
The 3D scanner: bit.ly/1a7y8hG
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D model: www.thingiverse.com/thing:146265
Embroidery Digitizing, Embroidery digitising, custom digitizing, $3.95 per 1000 stitches,www.anydigitizing.com
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M6 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Kodak TriX 400
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
PictionID:52732306 - Catalog:14_029591 - Title:GD/Astronautics Details: LSS Test Bed; Interior Date: 03/08/1965 - Filename:14_029591.TIF - Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
The first group of Portuguese immigrants to Hawaii invented the ukulele after they arrived in August 1879 via the SS Ravenscrag. That ship included cabinet makers from Madeira Island, who brought the Medeiran machete. In their new country, ukulele inventors Manuel Nunes, José do Espírito Santo, and Augusto Dias developed the ukulele, and the Hawaiians adopted it (ukulele means "jumping flea" in Hawaiian).
- Alice Kim
“This genuine Hawaiian ukulele outfit only $4.50, including genuine Hawaiian ukulele and complete book of instructions. Here’s a dandy musical gift for grownups and youngsters alike! Everybody loves the plaintive, strumming melody of the ukulele--and everyone can play it--it’s the easiest musical instrument to learn.”
From a Macy’s department store ad.
Ukulele Outfit
Richmond times-dispatch, December 14, 1919, Page 2
chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045389/1919-12-14/ed-...
Hawaii Digital Newspaper Project
We're delighted to announce that we've digitised another two years of the Dublin City Electoral Lists and the entries for 1908, 1909 and 1910 are now fully searchable at www.dublinheritage.ie - a great resource for family history, local history and social history, the database now contains 160,600 records
The electoral lists are a unique record of Dubliners during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
In our Dublin City Electoral Lists project we plan to digitise all of the Dublin City Council Electoral Lists 1898-1916 - part of the City Council's activities during the Decade of Commemorations.
(1 May 2014)
Embroidery Digitizing, Embroidery digitising, custom digitizing, $3.95 per 1000 stitches,www.anydigitizing.com
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0
Leica M3 | Carl Zeiss Planar T* 50mm f/2 ZM | Ilford HP5 400
Digitized with Epson Vuescan V550 + Negative Lab Pro v2.1.0 | Lomography
Ilford DDX
Garden gnome 3D-scanned with MakerBot Digitizer
www.creativetools.se/index.php?route=product/search&f...
The 3D model: www.thingiverse.com/thing:137617
An illuminated and illustrated copy of the collected works of Sa`di (d.691/1292) (Kullīyāt-i Saʿdī) containing, among others, his Gulistān and Bustān. The present manuscript was penned by an anonymous calligrapher in Shiraz (Iran) in 934 AH / 1527 CE. Majlis in springtime.
To explore fully digitized manuscripts with a virtual page-turning application, please visit Walters Ex Libris.
As in many other museums, digitization is a continuous and ongoing process, one of the projects going on at the moment at Nationalmuseum is the digitization of the architectural drawings collection.
Nationalmuseum in Stockholm is the home of a world-famous collection of drawings for architecture, gardens, applied arts and ephemeral decorations. It traces its roots back to the first Superintendents (Överintendenter) of Royal building works and consists of around 15 000 sheets. Young architects in the Superintendent’s office acquired numerous drawings while travelling and studying on the continent, in particular in France and Italy. Their purchases have made the collection an important part of European heritage, often quoted in international scholarship.
The collection of architectural drawings, which includes works from the 15th to the early 19th century, consists of four historic collections: the Tessin Hårleman Collection, the Cronstedt Collection, the Celsing Collection and the Eichhorn Collection, the two former ones being largest and most important.
Do you have anything you would like to share regarding these amazing drawings? Please do!
The photo above is of a piece by Claude Audran III (1658 – 1734), a proposal for a tapestry for Colbert with two different variants for color and edging.
Förslag till vävd tapet för Colbert - med två varianter till färg och bård.
Artist: Claude Audran III
Inventory number: NMH CC II 77
Photo: Cecilia Heisser/Nationalmuseum
From the photo collections of Nationalmuseum.
For licensing and high resolution images, contact the Photo archives; fototeket@nationalmuseum.se.
We used a Microsoft Kinect and SCENECT to laser scan 3D models of various objects.
We're currently in the process of digitizing the Lear Siegler ADM-3A serial terminal.
BugBlue is monitoring the scan progress and giving instructions to MacSimski (the Kinect operator) and Jaybee (the disc jockey).
MacSimski built the rotating disc out of a motor, computer power supply, skateboard wheels and some wood. Both speed and direction can be adjusted.
39th Infantry Regiment, 9th Infantry Division.
Photographer: Linden, 165th Signal Photo Co.
Photo Source: U.S. National Archives. Digitized by Signal Corps Archive.
Videography of Koodiyattam, an ancient theatre form of Kerala - almost 2000 years old.UNESCO has recognised Koodiyattam(kutiyattam) as Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. I was amused to note the two thousand year old art form being captured by modern digital technology which is hardly a couple of decades old.