Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Design. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

30 New Concept 3D Cars Visualized


3D Cars:

Mustang GT Red
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Zonda Tricolor
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Ferrari Racecar
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Nissan R390
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Green Snake
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Audio A5 GTR
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
350Z
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Koenignsigg CCX
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Concept II
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Hawk
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Nissan 350Z Tuned
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Audi R8
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Aston Martin V8 Vantage
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Audi RSQ
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Mercedes Benz SLS AMG
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Ferrari 250 GTO
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Peregrine
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Mazda Furai
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Incepto GT
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Future Ferrari
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Enzo Custom
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Pagani Zonda
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Concept Racing Car
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Peugeot 907
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Bugatti Veyron EV
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Mamba Concept
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Lamborghini Murcielago
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Nissan Skyline R32 Custom
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
XR-Z Concept Car
3D Cars - New Concept Cars
Porsche Carrera GT Racing
3D Cars - New Concept Cars

Monday, August 22, 2011

World's Smallest Origami by Anja Markiewicz

Origami (折り紙?, from ori meaning "folding", and kami meaning "paper"; kami changes to gami due to rendaku) is the traditional Japanese art of paper folding, which started in the 17th century AD at the latest and was popularized outside Japan in the mid-1900s. It has since then evolved into a modern art form. The goal of this art is to transform a flat sheet of material into a finished sculpture through folding and sculpting techniques, and as such the use of cuts or glue are not considered to be origami.
The number of basic origami folds is small, but they can be combined in a variety of ways to make intricate designs. The best known origami model is probably the Japanese paper crane. In general, these designs begin with a square sheet of paper whose sides may be different colors or prints. Traditional Japanese origami, which has been practiced since the Edo era (1603–1867), has often been less strict about these conventions, sometimes cutting the paper or using nonsquare shapes to start with.

Yet that’s what German artist Anja Markiewicz does, creating amazingly tiny sculptures of things like animals and snowflakes out of paper. Many of her tiniest paper cranes measure only 4mm across (check out those fingerprints for a sense of scale).











































 
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