2012-11-21

Test Renderings and diagrams experimenting with different ways to present our wall system.














Plastic Extruder_Tower Tests

Different methods for constructing a tower were tested this week.  The first was getting back to a layering of deposition, something we were attempting to get away from so as to not construct a coiling effect.  However, it was a necessary test to do and proved quite difficult to get the plastic to layer on top of itself because of the memory of the material. 

The Process - Create a series of columns as we have been, then make test different toolpaths, either a 3D coiling that changes in height, or a planar toolpath that extrudes at the same distance above the columns.  The results are below. The most interesting occurrences happened where the materiality of the plastic did something unaccepted.  For a method of constructing a tower however, this is not an efficient way to go as the results are not appealing or in anyway predictable.  



The second approach was aimed at combining several of the methods we were using before and yielded the most interesting and reliable way to construct the tower. 


The Process - Again it starts with the extrusion of columns with a thick base and thin cross section (the Hershey kiss)  Next a series of connections are made between the column tops by a 3 second extrusion on one of them, then turning off the extruder and pulling the plastic to the next column.  A triangulation of the columns with thin pieces of plastic results.  The next step is to deposit through a zig zagging manner along the connecting triangulation creating a build up of plastic, often leading to the dripping and hopefully tearing of the plastic as gravity pulls it off the thin connecting member.  In this way we are utilizing an interesting material property of the plastic as these thin connecting members between columns support much thicker depositions of plastic on top.  Columns are then placed on these thicker depositions, and the process is repeated. It has led to some really great spatial qualities on the interior.  Looking forward to having it grow to human size! 





Chroma - Renders

Rendering - November 21, 2012


Just a few quick renders:








I think going forward merging line drawings with the renderings will make for more dynamic images.

Plastic Extrusion_Spider Web

Photoshop test 1 (simply brushes)



Photoshop test 2 (form outline selection + brushes)

Working on shadows and selection of different depths to show a better 3D looking.
Need further discussion about final scale.

2012-11-15

Hyperbolic, Conic Boolean based on Cairo Tessellation

Three different panels from both sides. The apertures are created from the hyperbolic booleans and the scallopings are created from the conic booleans.

The aggregations from both sides.

Front Side

Back Side

2012-11-14

Conic Booleans_Variable depth

This most recent study shows how the panel and pattern of aggregation can be concealed and also changed by changing the depth of the panel.  While the pattern is exactly the same on each panel, because the depth changes, some booleans are concealed at times while others change width and size when the depth changes. The deeper panels only pick up the smaller booleans while the more shallow panels pick up both the small and large panels.  This creates variation in aperture without having to change the pattern.

FRONT

BACK