View allAll Photos Tagged digitizing
We used a Microsoft Kinect and SCENECT software to laser scan 3D models of various objects and persons.
This time, we're scanning a model of Jos Weyers in his trademark kilt, in order to create action figures.
BugBlue, the Kinect operator and progress monitor, is giving instructions to Bix, the turntable operator.
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
As I transition from Portland photowalks to other photo genres, I’m focusing on long-overdue indoor projects for rainy days. My current project involves digitizing 60 of my childhood record albums from the 1960s. Along with the audio tracks, I’m also photographing (digitizing) the front and back covers of each album.
I’m using Audacity (www.audacityteam.org/) to digitize the audio tracks. I created a worksheet to log important metadata, similar to photographs.
Growing up in rural Alaska, we didn’t have local TV stations or movie theaters, so listening to records and reading became favorite snowy-day activities. Hearing these albums again brings me back to my childhood in Valdez and Copper Center. I’m especially grateful to my mom (RIP) for saving them.
Side note: When I was a young boy living in Valdez during the March 27, 1964 Great Alaska Earthquake, I was listening to a 45 rpm record on a little turntable in my bedroom when the shaking began. I can’t recall what song was playing, but I think it was a western cowboy sing-along. Unfortunately, I no longer have any of my 45s, so I can’t be sure. I’ve shared more about my family’s experience during the earthquake in other photos. The tag is 1964alaskaearthquake
This is the same photomosaic as the previous photo, however all corals (and the calcified algae Halimeda) have been digitized. Each individual coral colony is outlined by hand using a digitizing tablet and each species is labelled with a different color. This image contains over 5000 corals.
This is how far the pen will go inside the tablet cover when you don't push it.
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Got this non-OEM digitizer pen (axt-mb100-0s01) via www.ebay.com/itm/290594401088
The original one sells for 5x the price and it's only advantage is that it fits inside the pen garage next to the display. Also, I prefer the size of the white pen.
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
Leica M6 | Leica Voigtlander Nokton Vintage Line 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical II VM Multi-Coated | Expired Kodak Tmax 400 2004 400 @ 100
Scanned with Negative Supply Co. | Negative Supply Co. | Negative Supply Co.
Ilford DDX
Negative Lab Pro v2.3.0 | Color Model: B+W | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: Linear + Gamma | WB: None | LUT: Frontier
Preservation Specialist Ashley Cox shows Archivist of the United States Dr. Colleen Shogan a record damaged in the 1973 fire. June 2023. NARA photo by John Valceanu
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
Embroidery Digitizing, Embroidery digitising, custom digitizing, $3.95 per 1000 stitches,www.anydigitizing.com
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
ilford sprite 35 ii ilford | fixed
Digitized with Negative Lab Pro v2.1.2
“I love being horribly straightforward. I love sending reckless text messages (because how reckless can a form of digitized communication be?) and telling people I love them and telling people they are absolutely magical humans and I cannot believe they really exist. I love saying, “Kiss me harder,” and “You’re a good person,” and, “You brighten my day.” I live my life as straightforward as possible.
Because one day, I might get hit by a bus.
Maybe it’s weird. Maybe it’s scary. Maybe it seems downright impossible to just be—to just let people know you want them, need them, feel like, in this very moment, you will die if you do not see them, hold them, touch them in some way whether its your feet on their thighs on the couch or your tongue in their mouth or your heart in their hands.
And there is nothing more risky than pretending not to care.
We are young and we are human and we are beautiful and we are not as in control as we think we are. We never know who needs us back. We never know the magic that can arise between ourselves and other humans.
We never know when the bus is coming.” - Rachel C. Lewis
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
This hand-crafted wooden sculpture was bought at a flea market in Gothenburg, Sweden. We thought that it would be a perfect test for the MakerBot Digitizer now that it has MultiScan feature.
The image above shows a typical scan result made with MakerWare for Digitizer 2.3 (a single pass) and one that shows the result of a MultiScan session made with four passes.
One of the STL files represents the raw MultiScan result and the other is the result with some simple tweaks in Autodesk MeshMixer.
The 3D model: thingiverse.com/thing:188003
The 3D printer: makerbot.creativetools.se
The 3D scanner: makerbot.creativetools.se
Fidget's drawing for Daddy blogged here: sewsitall.blogspot.com/2013/01/fidgets-drawing-for-daddy....