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Like the kid’s drawing game, 3D Consequences is similar but uses 3D digital modelling and the designs are swopped around the four designers participating: Farah Bandookwala, Elizabeth Armour, Lucy Robertson and Ann Marie Shillito. Apart from being fun the serious aspect of this pilot project is educational: to give a newbie the opportunity to learn 3D digital modelling and thereby gain access 3D printing. The aim of the project is to show the benefits of Anarkik3D’s haptic 3D modelling package, developed specifically for designer makers and applied artists. (Haptic means 3D touch.) Farah, Elizabeth and Ann Marie model with it and 3D print their work. Lucy joined the project as the newbie and used the Anarkik 3D Design packageas it is quick and easy to learn and to use as haptics provides a more natural way to interact in a virtual environment and model digitally, and to be creative and constructive from the very start. The models were swopped around in an ordery fashion and the 12 models were 3D printed. Our generous sponsors are: Sculpteo (www.sculpteo.com): 3D printed 8 of the models in polyamide ITEC 3D (http://www.itec-3d.com): 3D printed 6 models in paper using Mcor’s Matrix 3D printer. Anarkik3D (www.anarkik3d.co.uk): sponsoring Lucy’s tutoring to learn 3D modelling for 3D printing.
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3D Consequences4 Designers collaborating, swopping 3D digital models in 3 iterations to produce 12
models to 3D print. The designers are: Farah Bandookwala, Elizabeth Armour, Lucy Robertson, Ann Marie Shillito
3D Consequences Project.•Did you play ‘consequences’ as a kid, the drawing game, where you drew a head first, folded the paper over so only the neck lines are seen before passing it to the next person who drew the top part of the torso and the arms, folded the paper over again and on to the 3rd person, and so on? •3D Consequences is similar. We used 3D digital modelling and swopped the models around.•The four designers taking part are: Farah Bandookwala, Elizabeth Armour, Lucy Robertson and Ann Marie Shillito. (See slide 11 for bios and links)•Apart from being fun and collaborating with others, the serious aspect of this pilot project is educational.
• The project was set up by Ann Marie to show the benefits of Anarkik3D’s haptic 3D modelling tool, developed specifically for designer makers and applied artists.
• The project was sponsored by Sculpteo, ITEC 3D and Anarkik3D (See slide 12 for links)
The objectives:1. to give a designer maker new to 3D modelling some training and
support to learn and to use Anarkik 3D Design package to design for 3D printing.
2. To generate greater awareness of Anarkik 3D Design package:– Show how variable, organic and free form objects can be:
• Stage 1: ‘duplication’ (copy/paste, mirror), Stage 2: deform (and/or non-uniform scaling), stage 3 Boolean union/subtraction
– promote the project through blog, presentations, case study• Models swopped, screen captures of progress • 3D models saved as both .cr8 and .stl files. • Results: 3 iterations/4 designers = 12 digital designs for
3D printing– exhibit 2D and 3D printed work:
• November 2013 - 3DPrintShow (Anarkik3D’s stand), • 3rd April to 7th June 2014: StudioFusion Gallery, OXO
Tower London (http://www.studiofusiongallery.co.uk/)
* Boolean: a function to join 2 objects, subtract one object from another or subtract both from each other leaving the intersection as a new object
Time line21st July 2013: deadline for
applications from designer makers to
join project.24th July: Lucy
Robertson selected28th July: her first 2 sessions - 3 hour
tutorial with Anarkik 3D Design package, then start on designing (3- 4
hours).30th July: Project officially kicks off.
Context•Requirements to participate:
– access to Anarkik 3D Design software (Cloud9/Falcon haptic device).
– Time commitment: work on 3 pieces/4 deadlines– enjoy collaborating with others in a fun project.
•Newbie designer maker selected on application: – why they want to be involved in the project – their own portfolio of work– no previous experience using 3D digital design
packages: ie: 3D modelling, CAD or 3D printing technologies!
•Lucy Robertson, textile artist & designer joins project as ‘newbie’•Anarkik3D provides Lucy with tutoring, support and access to Anarkik 3D Design package.
Time line6th Aug 2013: first models swopped.
12-20th Aug: 2nd models swopped.3rd Sept:
3rd & final digital models completed.
10th Oct: 8 digital models uploaded to
Sculpteo.14th Oct: 8 models
3D printed7th Nov: Models
exhibited at 3DPrintShowin
London on Anarkik3D’s
stand
Project Stage 1: work on 1st model. Theme: ‘duplication’. Images of progress and explorations captured. First models saved in .cr8 and .stl file
formats ready for 1st swop. All saved to Project dropbox.Farah
Lizzie
Ann Marie
Lucy
Project Stage 2: swop models, Theme ‘deform’
Farah’s 1st model
passed to Ann Marie
Lizzie’s 1st model
passed to Lucy
Ann Marie’s 1st model passed to
Lizzie
Lucy’s 1st model
passed to Farah
Farah
Ann Marie
Lizzie
Lucy
Project Stage 3: final model swop Theme: ‘Boolean’
Ann Marie’s
2nd model passed
to Lizzie
Lucy’s 2nd
model passed
to Farah
Lizzie’s 2nd
model passes
to Lucy
Farah’s 2nd
model passed to Ann Marie
Farah
Lizzie
Lucy
Ann Marie
3D printing sponsored by Sculpteo (www.sculpteo.com)
8 models 3D printed in polyamide,
7 in white and one in red.
Exhibited at 3DPrintShow London
November 2013
3D printing sponsored by Mcor/ITEC3D
6 models 3D printed in paper. Images show process of extracting from the block of paper.
2 very small pieces not viable
Exhibition atStudio Fusion Gallery, OXO
Tower, London SE1 9PH.
3rd April to 7th June 2014 (http://www.studiofusiongallery.co.uk/)
Lizzie
Ann Marie
Short bios:
Farah Bandookwala ([email protected]) is an award winning jeweller and artist. The Jerwood Makers Open gave her the opportunity to create larger sculptural works with an interactive facet: elements that light up,
vibrate or move when the spectator approaches, touches or handles the work. For the ‘Wear IT’ exhibition, Farah has produced a range of new articulated jewellery. http://farahb.com/news/
Elizabeth Armour ([email protected]) “Designer and Maker of weird and wonderful creations; a Scottish Contemporary Jeweller who graduated from Jewellery and Metalwork at Duncan of Jordanstone, Dundee
in 2012. She creates bold pieces of ‘statement’ jewellery, fuelled by avid curiosity to explore and mimic natural structures found in flora and fauna; mostly underwater plant life and microscopy, finding that these fascinating
forms such as corals and anemones resonate tactility and beauty. www.elizabetharmour.com
Lucy Robertson ([email protected]) graduated from DoJCoA, Dundee University in textile design. A skilled print and digital textile designer, she started exploring the line between digital and physical textiles using
new technologies and bringing together Arduino, animo-magic technology, laser-cutting, fiber optics and crowdsourcing.
Ann Marie Shillito ([email protected]) Ann Marie Shillito is founder and CEO of Anarkik3D, a practicing designer maker and contemporary jeweller, an honorary research fellow (Edinburgh College of Art) and author of
a book (Digital Crafts: Industrial Technologies for Applied Artists and Designer Makers).Ann Marie is passionate about the power of making, particularly about the values and meaning that applied
artists and designer makers bring to their work and their use of tools, whether traditional or new. With greater, easier access to the phenomenon of 3D printing Ann Marie is intent on providing the means for broad participation by more designer makers as they have the appropriate attitude and expertise for pushing
boundaries, exploring, experimenting and exploiting whatever to create new work. (www.anarkik3d.co.uk)
Thank you to our generous Project sponsors
Sculpteo (www.sculpteo.com): 3D printed 8 of the models in polyamide.
ITEC 3D (http://www.itec-3d.com): 3D printed 6 models in paper using Mcor’s Matrix 3D printer. (http://www.mcortechnologies.com/)
Anarkik3D (www.anarkik3d.co.uk): Lucy’s tutoring and support to learn 3D modelling for 3D printing, 3D printing jewellery for exhibition at Studio Fusion Gallery
Studio Fusion Gallery (http://www.studiofusiongallery.co.uk/): Showcase in Gallery, printing and promoting