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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #28763 is a reply to message #28760 ] Wed, 08 June 2011 15:54 UTC |
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That's a beautiful sculpture! All sides of it are equally interesting. Is the big spherical part solid or hollow?
Bob
DeaverDesign
bobd
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #28777 is a reply to message #28773 ] Wed, 08 June 2011 20:41 UTC |
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Thanks for sharing these! It's always fun to see what people create when they use Shapeways to create projects for school.
Community Manager | Shapeways
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #28835 is a reply to message #28777 ] Thu, 09 June 2011 20:05 UTC |
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Very, very cool...! I love the physical representation of a distorted space....
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #28849 is a reply to message #28760 ] Fri, 10 June 2011 04:14 UTC |
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This is a very clever idea. Am I right in thinking that this is made by taking the geometry of the hallway and doing a sphere inversion on it? How big is the inverting sphere relative to the hallway, or the sculpture?
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #28859 is a reply to message #28849 ] Fri, 10 June 2011 09:07 UTC |
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@henryseg
idd, first we made a model of the room, than we generated the shere inversion
the radius of the sphere is 22.5 cm
the room is about 30m
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #29005 is a reply to message #28944 ] Tue, 14 June 2011 07:46 UTC |
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een millimeterke dik was peis ik genoeg geweest ze, corneel. maar wel schoon
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| Re: Sphere inversion [message #29008 is a reply to message #28760 ] Tue, 14 June 2011 10:19 UTC |
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Nice use of sphere inversion!
I'm very fond of spatial warping methods like that 
[Updated on: Tue, 14 June 2011 10:19 UTC] - Artist / Engineer / Designer / Shopowner / Volunteer / Moderator -
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