Tag Archives: box

Fourth Year: Further Box Iterations

I went back to try and pick up my project this morning from the painting place. It turns out it wasn’t dry yet so I was left with another couple of hours with little to do. After a number of successes the previous night exploring the idea of boxes and the right kind of one I wanted, I nipped down to the art shop and bought seven sheets of card.

From this, I successfully managed to make a box  that is the right sort of thing that I would like. On top of that, it will only require minor tweaking before I go ahead and give it another shot.

I still feel as though my project needs these as accompaniments so it gives a whole experience or feel to the project. Making it feel as though it is still something that you could possibly end up buying even if it is still a prototype at this stage.

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Fourth Year: Developing the Box

Unhappy with the way the box I prototyped earlier, this evening I set about making a new one, more like the way that I wanted it to look like. With a lack of card at my disposal, I have had to use layout paper so therefore it isn’t very strong. However it did turn out quite well so I shall look forward to tomorrow morning to get it made up in cardboard.

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Fourth Year: Taking it a step further

Whilst I am waiting for the body of my project to be painted, I am taking things a little bit further. Since I am looking more at products that have commercial value and/or could be put into production I am thinking that I should maybe take the whole concept of my project a step further and make it more believable as a product you could eventually buy.

The obvious next step in this process is a box. I did have one fairly significant problem when I came to making a prototype box, and that was I didn’t measure the size of my product before it went away to be painted so I had to use my phase 1 prototype which is basically the same size and hope that it will work out ok.

All in all the prototype didn’t turn out too badly. It has a section that will hold the cable, wall plug and the instruction booklet. The rest of the box is minimal. It snugly encases the product. However, if I make another prototype, it will be a little bigger and will have a little more detail such as fastening and proper wall thickness.

This will only go ahead if I can get it looking good, but I think it will be a good accompaniment to my product in making it more believable and emphasising the sort of designer that I want to be. Thinking of the whole process from start to finish even if it isn’t what I should necessarily be doing.

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#177 Rocket Robin

Another blast from the past (I guess there was no pun intended there). I did these a good few years ago, about the time when they did that Reliant Robin Space Shuttle piece on Top Gear. It was done so long ago I was still using GIMP (Gnu Image Manipulation Program) and not photoshop. The basic robin rocket shape was from an image on the Top Gear website and I added the background, the SRB’s and the other rockety bits. I am sure if I tried to do this again, I would come up with a better outcome, but it isn’t bad the way it is just now…

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#162 Dropbox: The Dissertation Saviour

This post is by no means me just finding out about Dropbox, it is just having found an even more useful application for it in context with everything else I have been doing. At the moment I am writing my dissertation. No big problem you might point out. I have one of my external hard drives plugged into my iMac all of the time to do do Time Machine backups so if I lose it or make a mistake with it and want to go back I can. Again not a problem. The problem is that I have 2 computers, my iMac is the one I use most of the time if I am doing work, because the screen is bigger and I can immerse myself in what I am doing easier, and my other computer is my ageing, 4 year old MacBook which is still just as capable of doing high intensity Photoshop work etc but I tend to avoid using it for anything major apart from work in University in the studio or light browsing.

If I need to exchange files between my two computers, I would either use a USB drive or external hard drive and manually move the files between them (dubbed Sneakernet by Phil Schiller) or I will hook them up together with my Ethernet cable for larger files I want to copy, such as merging Aperture libraries so it takes seconds instead of hours. You might ask now why I don’t just use that instead of going to the hassle of downloading and installing dropbox. The reason is simple.

I still have my computer back up every hour, again that isn’t a problem. I still have my dissertation and file of other things in a folder on my computer, another non-problem. I want my dissertation on 2 computers without the need of ‘Sneakernet’. Problem. When Dropbox is installed, it puts a folder on your computer which is uploaded to the ‘cloud’ and subsequent changes are then uploaded too. I installed Dropbox on both of my computers, put the dissertation folder into the folder that is uploaded and hey presto, it does the job as advertised on the tin. I go to my dissertation folder, open the Pages document as normal, and as soon as I press the save button it is uploaded. I want to go somewhere else and work on my dissertation, I take my laptop, and away I go, the dissertation is downloaded and I can work on it. I am not too bothered with incremental backups not being saved on my laptop with Time Machine or similar because I know the majority of the work will be done on my iMac. Simple as that.

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#159 DJCAD Degree Show

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#145 A Makeshift Studio

A few days ago, I started to dabble in making a makeshift light box to take pictures in of small objects. To do this I used the tutorial I found or was forwarded to a while ago (I’ll post link later when I’m back on my iMac). The result was relatively good if a bit small. All of the paper I had, no matter which sketchbook I tore pages out of to get paper to make it, none of which was sturdy enough to make it stand on its own, reinforcing it with cardboard strips did help but I was then left with the problem of it being really wonky and hardly big enough to fit anything decent inside to take photographs of. Another additional problem was that I couldn’t get my camera in at a decent angle for some things I was wanting to take a photo of.

This image below is what I ended up with and just look at how shoddy it looks:

That was Saturday. Last night I gave the whole lightbox/mini studio thing another shot and I took a different approach. I was thinking bigger this time. Remembering I had a sketchbook of A2 layout paper I started taking a few pages out of it and got to work. I took some blu-tac and put some on the sides of the paper and put it 20cm above the surface of my desk, letting the rest of the paper drape down and onto the desk. This left a short portion of white on the desk which would have been obvious on the photos, so I overlapped another piece of layout paper onto the one I had already positioned. Excellent. This sorted out the background for the photos, but the next bridge to cross was lighting.

With the first iteration of the light box I made, the built in roof helped with the diffusing of the light, avoiding the obvious reflections and the horrible direct light the desk lamp would have given. This version did not have a ‘roof’ so I had to improvise some what. I remembered something I had read somewhere on the internet, of someone at a motorshow and they had their DSLR with them. They wanted to avoid harsh highlights and shadows gotten from the use of the flash so they taped a piece of tracing paper or something close to tracing paper onto the flash of the camera which apparently helped them out massively with producing better shots. So what I did was I cut down a piece of layout paper (since I didn’t have my smaller layout pad to hand) and some more blu-tac and loosely wrapped the paper around the shade of the desk lamp (doable because it was an anglepoise style lamp) and attached using the blu-tac. Wrapping it round loosely meant air could get in and circulate so the paper would not get so hot which could cause a fire. That was something that was mentioned by the photographer talked about above at the motorshow who said that after constant use of the paper on the flash, a burning smell occurred which meant he had to stop and change paper every so often.

The final change I made was to change the light bulb in my lamp. The one that I use in it has a warm white light. Very yellow. The one I changed it to in order to take the pictures, and the one I got with the lamp when I bought it was a very white light, quite cold and clinical. It was, going by the white balance preset in Aperture 3 afterwards, quite close to daylight in a way.

And that was that. I could angle the light where I wanted it, and switching between my 50mm prime and my 18-55mm lenses I was able to produce some quite good photographs of model cars, my new Mr Jones Watch and a few other things. I spent roughly 3 hours taking photos last night which I was quite happy to do as I hadn’t taken so many for quite a while.

Here is the updated light box/studio
Makeshift Studio
How it's Done (Cheaply!)

The changes for next time? I think next time I am going to make a few more changes to this. The first one is that I am probably going to buy a large A0(ish) piece of paper to use. The larger space would be useful for taking larger objects, or being more adventurous with smaller ones. I was limited a few times when taking some pictures that I ended up seeing the edge of the paper. Use a tripod. I spent most of the time resting the camera on the desk and taking pictures that way. It became a bit of a problem when trying to take shots from above, especially when the shutter speed was quite low for some of the pictures. Make a better or bigger light diffuser to cover the light and possibly position it a little further away from the bulb itself. There was a number of times when I saw the light reflection and I know it could have been done a bit better. The final one is probably the use of some helping hands, either the small crocodile clip style or just getting someone in to give me a hand, but trying to hold up a piece of kappa board as a reflector, adjust the light and hold on to the camera at the same time did get a bit tricky at times, which did end up with some blurry images.

Apart from that, it ended up quite well. Over 300 photos were taken, that being an average of about 100 an hour for those of you who didn’t want to work that one out. And the quality was astonishingly good for something made in under five minutes. Some of the photos of model cars looked just as realistic as full size car images.

Here are some examples of the photographs taken using the makeshift studio:
50mm Prime
Mr Jones
Doors Open
Brain vs...
The Front of the Aston

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