Westlake Publishing Forums

General Category => General Forums => Topic started by: chester on March 07, 2014, 04:39:30 AM

Title: Papercraft structures
Post by: chester on March 07, 2014, 04:39:30 AM
This artist takes photos she has found on the internet and puts them on paper to create structures.
http://ofralapid.com/index.php/broken-houses-2010-11-1
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: lab-dad on March 07, 2014, 05:20:37 AM
Some interesting modeling subjects there. Even one for NickO!

--Mj
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: Chuck Doan on March 10, 2014, 02:06:41 PM
I like those a lot!
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: Mobilgas on March 10, 2014, 02:26:48 PM
There's some neat pictures in the bunch.  I think all they would be good for is Backdrop's  ::)
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: Mr Potato Head on March 10, 2014, 05:20:03 PM
I couldn't find the Artists info, do you have a name?
I've been doing something similar, I've been taking pictures of barns, and old wooden structures, then I manipulate them in a photo program, to make them look even older and have larger contrasts in color and then I print them on my Alps printer, on textured artist paper, but  just two dimensional, I'd show you but their to large for this site.
thanks
MPH
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: chester on March 10, 2014, 06:16:20 PM
The artist is a woman from Israel named Ofra Lapid.
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: finescalerr on March 11, 2014, 12:56:30 AM
An interesting thing about the vast majority of structure modelers using paper: They pretty much do as the Israeli artist. While the buildings themselves may be 3-D the texture is strictly tromp l'oeil. No individual boards or bricks and sometimes even the window framing is 2-D. That baffles me, especially since modelers of paper vehicles, trains, planes, and ships fabricate even the smallest detail in three dimensions. -- Russ
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: chester on March 11, 2014, 05:34:47 AM
Seen from a distance this type of modeling is superb looking but up close one realizes that the concept of true replication in miniature fails. It isn't however the intent of the artist, I believe, to be a true representation of an actual item in 1/1. I don't quite understand art but I think she accomplished her goals here.
Title: Re: Papercraft structures
Post by: Mr Potato Head on March 11, 2014, 08:33:30 AM
Wow Unc :o
Going all "French" on us ;D ;D
MPH