Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Print A 3D Selfie Of Your Body

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Feb, 2015 12:34 PM
    Ever fancied a 3D selfie of yours? Well, that's perhaps going to be the next cool thing in the realm of selfies.
     
    Dusseldorf-based DOOB 3D can produce a detailed, four-inch figurine of your body, or in other words, a 3D selfie, reported Wired.com.
     
    Making one of these figurines requires a massive pile of hardware and software - 54 DSLRs, 54 lenses, a complex 3D modelling pipeline, and an $80,000 full-colour 3D printer, not to mention a room-size scanning booth.
     
    The company has four 3D scanning booths (called "Doob-licators") scattered in strategic locations throughout the world.
     
    There's one in Dusseldorf, one in Tokyo, one at Santa Monica Place in Los Angeles, and one in New York City's Chelsea Market. The DOOB shop in New York has been a pretty big hit.
     
    The Doob-licator saw about 500 customers over the winter holiday season, Michael Anderson, CEO of DOOB 3D USA, was reported as saying by Wired.
     
    About 10 percent of the booth's customers got their pets Doob-licated.
     
    "At first, (people got DOOBs made) mostly on a whim. Now, at least two thirds of our customers have planned ahead to get a DOOB," Anderson said.
     
    Each Doob-licator is outfitted with 54 Canon EOS Rebel T5i DSLRs, arranged in nine columns of six cameras each.
     
    A customer steps in, strikes a pose, and the Doob-licator operator fires all the cameras at once. That creates a full-body scan in a fraction of a second.
     
    The next step involves feeding all those 18-megapixel images through the company's proprietary software, which creates a 3D model of the subject.
     
    The printing process requires more patience. A high-resolution laser-sintering 3D printer uses a resin polymer material, and the full range of CMYK colour is added to each powder layer as it's printed.
     
    With a top printing speed of 1.1 inches per hour and a process that sometimes involves thousands of layers of powder, the process takes a few hours for the smallest-size DOOB and half a day or more for the larger ones.
     
    A life-size statue can cost up to $75,000.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Google Glass to assist surgeons soon

    Google Glass to assist surgeons soon
    The eyewear device Google Glass can be a useful tool in surgical settings, a promising research reveals.

    Google Glass to assist surgeons soon

    Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

    Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

    Did you ever think the smart phone you are holding in your hands is made of some rare, scarce ear...

    Sea deposits to build your smart phone!

    Opinion: Trash is not ugly

    Opinion: Trash is not ugly
    How would it look if the worn out motherboard of a computer becomes your coaster or the headlight of a bike turns into your desk lamp or tyre tube used as a wallet and the door of an old refrigerator as the centre table of your room? This is not wild imagination but creative ways of using scrap and making it look chic.

    Opinion: Trash is not ugly

    Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves

    Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves
    The return of co-founder N.R. Narayana Murthy from retirement as executive chairman June 1, 2013 notwithstanding, a whopping 36,268 software engineers at medium and lateral levels left the IT bellwether during the last 12 months.

    Why Young techies are leaving Infosys in droves

    Get ready for smaller, better hard drives

    Get ready for smaller, better hard drives
    The hard drives in your computer could get even smaller as scientists have now discovered a novel technique to understand better the new properties that arise when two materials are put together.

    Get ready for smaller, better hard drives

    Obsessed with selfies? You may be mentally ill

    Obsessed with selfies? You may be mentally ill
    Taking lots of selfies is not an addiction but a symptom of Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD), psychologists warn.

    Obsessed with selfies? You may be mentally ill