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For me, the problem I envision is that of semi-translucency. To my eye, colored plastics always look like colored plastics, and not painted metal/wood/whatever. I always avoid using anything made from colored plastic because of this; I'll always apply paint or some other finishing effect to kill the colored-plastic look.Which leads me to wonder what these colored-3D-printed products will look like. I feel as though 3D-printing has become the darling of the model railroad world, in some way, and while I do see plenty of advantages, I also see as many issues.
This. Colored resins aren't going to replace tradition painting and lettering, at least not in my life time.And one of the issues is that we have to piggyback off of other uses be it jewelry making or dental implants or whatever. It would be interesting to see what sort of printer could be made with just model trains in mind.Jason
Sorry the images didn't work, here they are:
Yes - that they key their marketing images around organic objects raises all sorts of red flags for me. Shapeways is no better - jewelry and gaming figures seem to play heavily into their promotion, as well.BTW, take a look at the veggies in the rice roll at the bottom of the lower image (or whatever it is... not a sushi fan). A lot of aliasing going on there.
That rice looks more like cottage cheese. Given the quality of the rest, I'd have expected better.
Peteski: You're right on the 3D scan resolution. No way we're going to get a decent N scale model from the usual scanners.But, since the picture was originally part of a post on adding color, looking at it just for the colors, those look excellent. The only issue I can see is that they seem to be glossy, which is good for most food, but not for a freight car. That salmon looks at least as good as the last piece I ate.
Good eye on that, the printer is capable of both gloss and flat colors, and completely crystal clear as well, for windows.