3D scanning solutions

How Artec 3D is supporting Ukraine

Science and education 3D models page 2

Scanned using Artec 3D technology
Eva

A beautiful skull of an African antelope, captured with Eva in two scans: the front and the back. These were then automatically aligned in Artec Studio.

Eva

A fish can be tricky to scan, since it's body geometry changes when you turn it over to scan the other side, unless it's frozen (and in this case it was not).

S. Spider

Scanning this flower with Artec Space Spider was fairly easy — one just needed to be mindful of  perspective change in geometry of the petals once the object was turned over.

S. Spider

The lightweight, handheld Artec Space Spider scanned more than 250 fragments of this 2-million-year-old hominid skull exactly how and where they were found.

S. Spider

The intricate geometry of the frog’s skin was captured by Artec Spider in just 6 minutes! The model was scanned in two passes.

Leo

Lucy, a 7-month-old puppy, was tired during her scan. Late one evening, after a full day, Lucy jumped onto an ottoman, ready to snooze. Thus a perfect Leo scanning moment appeared!

Leo

Wilson, a 7-year-old Ivory Lab, is very food-motivated. Without an ample supply of treats, this scan wouldn’t have happened.

S. Spider

This pleurotus eryngii mushroom was very easy to scan due to its size and thickness.

S. Spider

A precise scan was created with Spider in just 6 minutes, with 25 minutes of processing time, including texturing.

S. Spider

Product part made of plastic. Scanning time was around 5 minutes, and post-processing took about 20 minutes. This is a good example of fast reverse engineering.

S. Spider

A taxidermy porcupine fish, scanned with Space Spider. A somewhat challenging object due to its semi-translucent skin and difficult geometry.

S. Spider

Even though the sea shell has complex geometrical curves and arms, its surface was easily captured with Artec Spider.

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