Detailed recreations of science fiction art from the 1970s. He calls them sculptures, but the techniques are familiar to modelers.
http://www.grantlouden.com/shipyard.htm
Maybe there's a group build or a contest in this idea? Pick a favourite SF book cover, and try to recreate it.
Models based on book covers
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It's interested how he goes through testing the shapes versus the 2D picture taken at the same angle. I've definitely had that problem where I'm trying to make something in 3D that I only have an off-axis 2D picture of. I wouldn't have thought of doing it in paper and then taking a picture of it from the same angle.
-Rog
-Rog
All of this takes me back to when I was a tweener, and I'd take my Aurora model of a subject and hold it relative to a picture of, as some like to say, 'the prototype'. I would pose the model until I could dart my eyes between it and the picture and see where there were differences. Admittedly, most of the time, all I had was box art from the kit, but even there I could see huge changes between the model and the box art and that's even allowing for parallax.
Still, its a very useful double check for verifying the model (or in my case, the scratchbuild in question) and the references. I have used a variety of rapid prototyping methods to verify a build before committing to lengthy builds in plastic. Some are as nice as building the paper model (when available), others are cardboard profiles, and when necessary, doing some quick and dirty construction with sheet styrene. I can churn a plastic box in a few minutes. Couple more minutes, and I can cut off an edge and apply a bevel.
In short, I spend most of my 'build' time, not building. I spend it figuring out how a sub-assembly is shaped. And any trick that is useful in translating a bunch of reference pictures to model construction is welcomed.
Still, its a very useful double check for verifying the model (or in my case, the scratchbuild in question) and the references. I have used a variety of rapid prototyping methods to verify a build before committing to lengthy builds in plastic. Some are as nice as building the paper model (when available), others are cardboard profiles, and when necessary, doing some quick and dirty construction with sheet styrene. I can churn a plastic box in a few minutes. Couple more minutes, and I can cut off an edge and apply a bevel.
In short, I spend most of my 'build' time, not building. I spend it figuring out how a sub-assembly is shaped. And any trick that is useful in translating a bunch of reference pictures to model construction is welcomed.
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I like the Welcome to Mars design by Peter Ellison. Its been years since I saw it in an art book and thought then that it deserved being built - even a kit released although I was certain that would never happen.
Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage
to change the things I cannot accept, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of those I had to kill today because they got on my nerves.
And help me to remember when I'm having a bad day and it seems that people are trying to wind me up, it takes 42 muscles to frown, 28 to smile
and only 4 to extend my arm and smack someone in the mouth!
to change the things I cannot accept, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of those I had to kill today because they got on my nerves.
And help me to remember when I'm having a bad day and it seems that people are trying to wind me up, it takes 42 muscles to frown, 28 to smile
and only 4 to extend my arm and smack someone in the mouth!
- Mr. Badwrench
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I never cared for that painting. It doesn't match the description of the Out Of Band II from the story. I don't know if Boris never read the book, or just decided to go his own direction with the painting. Still, it might make a pretty cool model.steelrose wrote:Personally, I'd start with Vernor Vinge's A Fire Upon The Deep, the chrome tropical fish ship (Out Of Band II).
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
Likewise. Going to have to put on another pot of coffee for the rest.Johnnycrash wrote: Beautiful work. WOW!! And all I have had time to look at is "The Star Dwellers".
That's an amazing inspiration.
(edit:) There really is just the one build article. The other projects are still ongoing (or abandoned?).
World's Tallest Jawa!