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Scanning the President in 3D

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Scanning the President in 3D

This isn’t an artistic likeness of the president ... This is actually millions upon millions of measurements that create a 3D likeness that we can now 3D print — and make something that’s never been done before.
— Adam Metallo - http://www.siggraph.org/discover/news/president-obama-lands-first-3d-presidential-portrait
This President Abraham Lincoln plaster cast from April 1860 was the inspiration for the digital face scan

This President Abraham Lincoln plaster cast from April 1860 was the inspiration for the digital face scan

This news passed me by when it came out in December 2014, but its a remarkable testament to how far the development of digital humans has come. Barack Obama became the first US President to have his likeness digitally scanned and 3D-printed. Inspired by the plaster casts of President Lincoln, Adam Metallo and Vincent Rossi conceived of the project to digitally represent Obama, which was lead by Günter Waibel, Director of the Smithsonian 3D Digitization Program Office.

The process used a mobile version of Paul Debevec's Lightstage technology, which uses an array of 50 lights and 8 DSLRs to capture 80 photographs in a range of lighting in under 1 second. This quickly capture vast detail and lighting information from a subject's face. Lightstage has been used to create digital faces for a number of Hollywood films including The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and Avatar, and Debevec and his team won a Scientific and Engineering Award (a scientific Oscar) for the Lightstage.

The Lightstage data was augmented with data from hand-held digital scanners, which were able to fill in the missing data from the back of the President's head. The entire process of digital capture took just 7 minutes, which is even more impressive when you consider that it took 15 minutes for the plaster to dry on Lincon's face. Of course, the real work started once they left the White House. The different data sets needed to be combined into a unified space and then optimized into a 15 million polygon model ready for 3D printing.

The files were then transferred to 3D Systems, who used a process called Selective Laser Sintering to print a highly detailed 1:1 scale bust of President Obama over 42 hours. The bust is now on display in the Smithsonian museum in Washington.

Paul Debevec explains how the Lighstage works:

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Photo Journal 05

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Photo Journal 05

With this photo, taken in the garden on our Mallorca cottage, I was interested in trying to capture the harsh nature of the environment, and how remarkable it is that anything can thrive here. Not sure if I have fully realized this ambition, but I feel that it goes someway to telling that story.

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Photo Journal 04

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Photo Journal 04

Photo of one of the many cats which lives near where I'm staying in Mallorca. This is my first attempt at wildlife photography, and my first day playing with my new Canon EF 75-300mm f/4.0-5.6 III Lens. I'm quite pleased with the way that this has turned out, I think the framing is good and the bokeh of the defocused BG is pleasing. I'm going to play around with this more and see what I can achieve.

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Photo Journal 03

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Photo Journal 03

Unfortunately I missed a few days, due to a combination of work stress and then illness, but back on it with something a bit different - this is the view from my airplane seat on the way to Mallorca. 

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Photo Journal 02

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Photo Journal 02

I wasn't looking for a sunset sky photo today, and hopefully when I do go looking for them I will find something more interesting, but I found the lighting and colour on these clouds to be really beautiful, and the silhouette of the buildings made the shot interesting enough to be my choice of photo for the day

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Photo Journal 01

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Photo Journal 01

Not entirely thrilled with the results of this one, but try trying something different after a few consecutive days of closeups of things around my house. This is a church near to the office where I work, and I'm attempting to capture a somewhat dramatic sky and a foreground object without either element being clipped.
Shooting raw and being able to grade back some of the detail has helped a lot here, but I feel like the image has ended up looking a little processed and also a bit flat. Will have to experiment a bit more with this

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