Posts Tagged "old"
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Virtual reality testing: virtual fashion shoot of 3D object
Today, we’re doing a glamorous virtual fashion fashion shoot of the caveman co-designed object we created yesterday on Shapeways. This is virtual reality testing. This is the future. VR testing is a perfect compliment with 3D printing, because it provides a means to test physical objects before they are even created. In yesterday’s photo post, we created a caveman-designed (or co-designed) object available on Shapeways that we created in homage to the maker movement. (It was a popular monochrome photo from earlier in our photo stream: our blog post on the 11,000 year-old woolly mammoth cave drawing. We converted it into a keychain holder. It truly was caveman design.) So, to do this properly, we need to have a virtual fashion shoot of this object which does not yet exist. (But likely will eventually exist when someone orders it on-demand.) This is futuristic concept of virtual reality testing. Since keychains are hard to model, we temporarily made this into a necklace pedant, hanging from our virtual model’s (not included) glowing yellow pearls (or whatever those things are that we made that don’t fit into the theme of the rest of the outfit.)… Read the restCaveman design keychain: blog image to 18K gold jewelry 3D print!
We’re having fun showing our most popular blog and photo posts can now be turned in real, shop-ready products thanks to the maker movement. As an example of data-driven social media, we repurposed a popular image from our social media feed into a 3D printed jewelry item available that is ready-for-purchase in 18K gold and other materials. (Separately, we also converted this blog photo into an in-game virtual reality object, permitting a virtual reality fashion shoot.) This caveman design keychain was co-designed and generated in part by an 11,000-year old caveman illustration of a woolly-mammoth in France. (You can read our original blog article with illustration here. Also, check out a cool data-driven social media video we created featuring some of these items, as well as more serious pop-scientific article on potentially de-extincting the woolly mammoth for interstellar space travel someday.) You can use the Shapeways widget below to manipulate the 3D object and see it from a variety of viewpoints (as well as buy the physical object in a wide-variety of materials, from the extremely inexpensive to the very expensive): So we can say that this keychain was truly co-designed by a French Cro-magnon caveman living 11,000 years ago.… Read the restmath pattern art: mathematical quilting & design
Mathematical quilting and math pattern art & design: shown here are 17th century Italian quilts made from mathematical patterns. Yesterday’s Hamming metric (or Hamming Error Correcting Code) quilt got us thinking. Turns out there is a branch of quilting making (or perhaps a branch of mathematics if you will), “mathematical quilting.” It looks to math — polynominals, Rule 90 cellular automatons, etc., for inspiration in quilt making and pattern art. Shown here is so called “Florentine work” because these popular quilt designs are based on mathematical patterns originally found on chairs in the Bargello Palace (today an art museum) in Florence Italy. These chairs date to at least the 17th century, if not earlier. There are many types of these quilts, which are typically very colorful. The quilting requires precise counting of squares so that the pattern art design conforms to the mathematical pattern chosen. So yesterday’s crazy quilt, in which math creates art, isn’t unique.… Read the restNapoleon in Russia: Classic 19th Century Infographic
This is an amazing, classic 1869 French infographic and data visualization on Napoleon’s disastrous 1812-13 Russia campaign. Although it does not entirely fit into an Instagram square (this was originally published on IG), the very thick line in color is the Emperor of France’s army arriving. The extremely thin black lines are the surviving retreating troops staggering back home from Moscow. Frost bite and the bitter Russian winter were a major factor contributing to the heavy losses. (The temperature is shown in the bottom of the chart in Celsius, and you can see the impact of lower temperatures on the thinning black line. Had wind chills been understood in 1869, an even more dramatic correlation might have been possible.) This infographic is successful because it succinctly captures a great deal of information into a single figure. In addition to showing Napoleon’s dwindling troop strengths at various points in the campaign, a rough sense of chronology, geography (town names) and troop movements is given, together with the environmental conditions that contributed to the disaster. … Read the restRecent Posts
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