Stanford Dragon Model

Written July 4th, 2010
Categories: Downloads, Models
4 comments

This is the Stanford dragon model available for free download in various formats.  There are some scientific differences between this model and the original .PLY from Stanford.  The dragon’s absolute size has been increased to 1.174′ by .525′ by 0.828′ and the pivot is repositioned to the base rather than the center of the object.  There are 50,000 vertices and 100,000 triangles.

This is a great all-around tester like the dragon model. I’ve gotten great use out of it for sub-surface scattering tests due to it’s great blend of thick and thin geometry!

Click this link to download the Stanford Dragon Model. It’s a regular object file. Just unzip it and import it into your scene.

Stanford Bunny Model

Written July 4th, 2010
Categories: Downloads, Models
3 comments

This is the Stanford bunny model available for free download in various formats.  There are some scientific differences between this model and the original .PLY from Stanford.  The bunny’s absolute size has been increased to 0.836′ by 0.648′ by 0.829′ and the pivot is repositioned to the base rather than the center of the object.  There are 34,835 vertices and 69,666 triangles.

This is a great tester for volumetric effects because it has a large body with relatively thin geometry along the ears.  And it’s just so gosh-darn cute!

Click this link to download the Stanford Bunny Model. It’s a regular object file. Just unzip it and import it into your scene.

Making of Bunny

“There weren’t any sketches or concepts done in the process of creating this character, I simply wanted to create a cute, cartoonish bunny character. The only reference I had in mind at the time was of Bugs Bunny’s girlfriend from the movie, Space Jam, but I didn’t use any actual visual references in order to avoid copying that character.”

“Making of “So you think Im fat do you?”

Written June 18th, 2008
Categories: Articles, Offsite, Painting / Drawing, Photoshop
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“First of all I open a new document (approximately 3000 wide and 2600 high, around 300-500 dpi) and make a preliminary sketch.”

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