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Has anyone tried to print up some hella-realistic tree armatures? They could be used for winter trees with paint, or used as the basis of all the leaf adding techniques that @grove den does.
While the idea seems very good, even thought the resin used in this printer is much more durable than the easily-shattering FUD or FXD resin, I suspect the long thin branches would be very fragile. Maybe good for a diorama under glass, but not sure if they woudl survive operating sessions and cleaning/dusting on a regular layout.The other thing is the supports needed for printing. There might be more supports needed than the actual branches? Some deep inside the branch canopy? Still, I would like to see someone try to do this.
I think you'd be surprised at how durable it is. And I'm not suggesting printing hundreds of very fine branches; just getting a realistic tree shape down would be awesome--especially woodland trees, which are shaped very differently from "front yard" trees.
This has been my holy grail for a long time.But to even get the design you'd essentially need a fractal generator or something like that.I would love to see someone figure it out though!
Forger Jos (even though his model trees are beautiful and super-realistic) - how about scanning a 1:1 tree (in a leafless state of course).
The only attractive thing about WS tree armatures is the ability to bend and/or twist the branches to suit.I have real doubts that the resin armatures from 3D printers will afford that opportunity.
But why would you design a hexagonal tree instead of a rounded tree?
Bending the WS armature is actually a necessity, because they're made flat. If the 3D printed armature is the right shape to begin with, it wouldn't be necessary.