Huevos means "egg" in Spanish. In a 3D design course in
college, we did something called "egg crating". In an industrial
setting, it deals with packaging objects and can often use,
interlocking cardboard to hold objects (think of a case of bottles that
has dividers between them). Well, that's what we did in the
class.
The piece that yours truly turned in was the most complex object the
school had ever seen. The shape was generated by a self-written
program and visualized with graphing software. Each of the
interlocking planes was then drawn on a computer plotter and these
formed a template which was used to allow the pieces to be cut out of a
posterboard with an X-Acto knife by following the patterns from the
plotter.
That's not to say that my work was inherrently better than the other
students but it was so far beyond what they could do in terms of
complexity and detail because the computer program was taking care of a
lot of those details and doing the drawings automatically.
Remember, this was the in the 80's and relatively few people had
computer access and skills, especially in an art department.
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Paper Eggs | A City of Glass | Oops... | |
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Mesh Inlay | An Experiment |
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Fast forward a few decades and the idea of doing another egg crated
object came up and I started to write a new Python program to do it but
would still cut them by hand. Shortly after this, I had access to
a laser cutter and then it could do all the cutting work and the
intricacy of the objects could now be even more detailed and complex as
well as using new materials like acrylic and even wood. It's
worked out well over the last few years and there are many more objects
to come out of this.