Scanned using Artec 3D technology
This extraordinary 3D model of a mock crime scene comes from a Dutch Police training facility in the Netherlands, featuring subway train wagons, forensic mannequins, and everything else within the simulated crime scene.
They say that Nature is the perfect designer, and if you could ask Mr. Stubbs about this, he’d probably agree with you.
A quick scan of hand bones with nails made with Artec Spider. The object was scanned in three passes over just 8 minutes and processed afterwards for 30 minutes.
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.
Infant skull, scanned with Artec Spider in three passes. The scanning took approximately 5 minutes and processing 25 minutes.
The intricate geometry of the frog’s skin was captured by Artec Spider in just 6 minutes! The model was scanned in two passes.
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!
Wilson, a 7-year-old Ivory Lab, is very food-motivated. Without an ample supply of treats, this scan wouldn’t have happened.
The backbone and ribs turned out to be an easy job for Spider, since even though the model is geometrically rich, it did not contain any particularly hard to scan surfaces.
A precise scan was created with Spider in just 6 minutes, with 25 minutes of processing time, including texturing.