Continuing from Friday’s post, we cover the next step in converting the 3D rendering into crisp shiny assets suitable for framing: tracing into vectors.
We left off last time with a high-resolution high-contrast rendering of our model. Now it’s time to explain why.
Here at DLB, we prefer to make most of our assets as vectors. Vectors are mathematical representations of lines (rather than pixels which have a fixed scale) so they are always crisp and perfect at any scale. That’s why we like them so much. We’re absolute neat-freaks, whether it’s geometry or CSS and we don’t like building things more than once.
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Nick — Jul 6, 2008
More internally cohesive than a macaroni picture and more personal than an engraved pen set, the Design Less Better Snowflake Generator is win-win.
Written by
DLB on December 12, 2007
December is gift-giving time, and if you're not very organized indeed, late November/early December threatens to be characterized not by a pleasant anticipation of quality-time-to-come and a much-needed respite from work and research, but instead by a certain existential dread, or at least a rather more ontic version, most often directed at visions of the mall parking lot.
Being the vigilant (and vigilante) designers we are, Design less better organized in November under the auspices of creating some generative art for the holidays. We especially liked Jer Thorp’s idea of using letterforms as elements in a snowflake, but we wanted to personalize the results. In what even now we have to admit was a brilliant intuitive leap, we thought, "why not use the names of our loved ones? Then we can give them to our loved ones instead of going to the mall."
Once we knew we were making these as gifts, we decided we would digitally fabricate ornaments from our designs. This threw a structural requirement on top of the aesthetic one, but, remembering the mall, we plunged bravely forward.
A detail from a generated snowflake.
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DLB — Dec 12, 2007
Tagged with: Claes Oldenberg,
Digifab,
DIY,
Family,
Generative,
Gifts,
Illustrator,
Macaroni Pictures,
Photoshop,
Processing,
Project,
Snowflake.