The Ethereal Lithophane

HeadwaxHeadwax Posts: 9,989
edited September 2022 in Carrara Discussion

Well, what's  a Lithophane?

It's a piece of translucent stuff that, when you shine a light through it, you can see a picture.

Traditionally they were made in porcelaine. To make dark parts of the picture you made the porcelain thicker. To make the light parts, you made it thinner.

People are starting to make them with 3d printers. You can make boxes where all sides have an image, you can make spheres, etc etc.

You can make them in Ultimaker Cura ( a free slicer)  very easily and export them out as an OBJ file and bring them into Carrara and render them - they could be useful for hologrammic effects etc.

A slicer is what you use to prepare an OBJ or STL file for printing.

 

This image has one of Carrara's glass haders. It has a distance light behind it. Caustics are turned on and ambient light turned off.

It uses some images from Ron's Cyborg Part's product. Ron's Cyborg Parts | Daz 3D

There's a tutorial on using Cura here Tutorial Tuesday 38: Lightning-Fast Lithophanes With Cura - Shapeways Blog - it's very simple

You can also upload your image to here Image to Lithophane Generator (lithophanemaker.com) to make cylinders spheres etc

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Post edited by Headwax on

Comments

  • DiomedeDiomede Posts: 15,176

    Cool. Add light filters the list of things I would never have thought of. Amazing the various directions you are taking this medium.  Going to be worth checking that Tutorial Tuesday stuff.

    Maybe I have to get a 3D printer.

  • HeadwaxHeadwax Posts: 9,989
    Ah you have an open mind, that is enough ! Thank you for commenting : ) i find the beauty of 3d printing is that I have no idea what I am doing. And that is good .,!
  • WendyLuvsCatzWendyLuvsCatz Posts: 38,247
    edited September 2022

    my useless brick is gathering dust in the laundry 

    BTW putting your image in the Carrara terrain editor would create the mesh needed for the print too

    just need add a zero edge filter, convert to vertex model, select all the outer edges and fill polygon to close the base

    Post edited by WendyLuvsCatz on
  • Steve KSteve K Posts: 3,236

    Impressive again.  This is the kind of thing I look for at the big art shows here in Houston.  Hard to find among all the 2D paintings/photos and jewelry. 

  • HeadwaxHeadwax Posts: 9,989

    WendyLuvsCatz said:

    my useless brick is gathering dust in the laundry 

    BTW putting your image in the Carrara terrain editor would create the mesh needed for the print too

    just need add a zero edge filter, convert to vertex model, select all the outer edges and fill polygon to close the base

    good idea Wendy! Always two ways or more to skin a cat :) 

  • HeadwaxHeadwax Posts: 9,989

    Steve K said:

    Impressive again.  This is the kind of thing I look for at the big art shows here in Houston.  Hard to find among all the 2D paintings/photos and

     

    Thanks again. :) yes the old fashioned ways have a depth of ideas to be mined I think. Be fun to print in silicone and learn cold casting. There’s also a metal called Rose’s Metal with a low melting temp also, but it’s too dear here.

     

     

     

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