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Papercraft structures

Started by chester, March 07, 2014, 04:39:30 AM

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chester

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

lab-dad

Some interesting modeling subjects there. Even one for NickO!

--Mj

Chuck Doan

"They're most important to me. Most important. All the little details." -Joseph Cotten, Shadow of a Doubt





http://public.fotki.com/ChuckDoan/model_projects/

Mobilgas

There's some neat pictures in the bunch.  I think all they would be good for is Backdrop's  ::)
Craig

Mr Potato Head

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
Gil Flores
In exile in Boise Idaho

chester

The artist is a woman from Israel named Ofra Lapid.

finescalerr

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

chester

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.

Mr Potato Head

Wow Unc :o
Going all "French" on us ;D ;D
MPH
Gil Flores
In exile in Boise Idaho