3D scanning solutions

How Artec 3D is supporting Ukraine

OBJ 3D models page 3

Scanned using Artec 3D technology
S. Spider

The main difficulty with scanning internal organs is that they are soft and change shape when flipped, making it difficult to combine scans made from different sides.

Leo

What appears to be a normal, everyday office chair, plucked from the glass and steel confines of a typical high-tech office in sunny California, serves as a fine example of capturing modern furniture with Artec Leo.

Leo

Taking only 20 minutes to scan the whole car, and just under one and a half hours to process the captured 3D data, this highly accurate 3D model was ready in under two hours from start to finish.

S. Spider

The complex geometry of this carburetor makes it a very simple object to 3D scan!

S. Spider

The inner side of this old bronze helmet is very narrow. Artec Spider was able to scan it perfectly and in high detail.

Eva

A wooden chair scanned with Eva. To scan the thin parts, we laid it onto the floor in order to get a background surface.

S. Spider

This coin was thick enough to stand its side and was captured in just two scans. The second scan was to cover the side that the coin stood on.

Leo

Now, if this hyper-realistic 3D model of an adorable bear doesn’t conjure thoughts of a jolly Christmas, what will?

Combo

Team Artec is constantly putting 3D scanners through all sorts of tests to see how well they handle a wide range of objects, as well as to delineate the best path to follow for delivering the most accurate results. One such test project is showcased here on this page.

Micro

For a significant scanning challenge, it was time to get up close, for a highly-detailed model of this industrial clamp.

Eva

An elegant upholstered chair. A fairly complicated object to scan — the polished black wood and the thin back and arms required a special approach.

Eva

A small bedside table, quickly scanned by Artec Eva in three scans. The thin legs might have been a challenge if they had not been scanned in front of a background (the wall and floor). Otherwise, a very easy to scan piece of furniture.

S. Spider

These coins were scanned on a leaflet featuring printed text to make it easy to capture the edges.

Micro

A copper key scanned with Artec Micro. The key had to be sprayed due to its reflective surface.

Combo

We used Artec Space Spider’s exceptionally high resolution and Artec Leo’s large field of view & high scanning speed to create a remarkably precise model from the combined raw data.

Leo

Part of an outdoor fountain basin, this 3D model of a croc was created with the Artec Leo 3D scanner and the powerful Artec Studio software.

Eva

A cosplay of a ruthless mercenary from DC comics universe - Deathstroke.

S. Spider

Even though this plate has a thin and narrow edge, Artec Spider scanned it with ease, using the texture of the background.

Eva

The symmetrical geometry of this vase could have made it difficult to scan, but thanks to its rich texture, capturing it with Eva was fast and very easy.

Combo

The craftsman who created this feast for the eyes definitely put a great deal of effort into their work. So did Artec Space Spider and Eva, the two handheld 3D scanners which were used to capture everything down to the finest features of this geometry-rich object in order to make the 3D model look as impressive as the original work of art, inspired by Doom, the epic shooter.

Micro

Easily captured with the desktop high-resolution 3D scanner Artec Micro, this tiny plastic wand connector section of a Drain Weasel would be a challenge for many other 3D scanners.

Leo

Yes, this is one of those dandy not-so-little devices that no one wants to hear their mechanic talking about, especially not while he’s rubbing his hands together and has a certain little gleam in his eye.

S. Spider

Scanning ears is a popular solution for making prosthetics: the detailed geometry of a healthy ear can be mirrored and made into a perfect replica.

Micro

Plastic can reflect light directed at it. That’s simple yet very useful info for someone who wants to have an electrical outlet 3D scanned.