3D scanning solutions

How Artec 3D is supporting Ukraine

Content Writer

Paul Hanaphy

Paul Hanaphy

Originally from London, Paul Hanaphy is a journalist turned marketing content writer at Artec 3D. Since going full-time as a journalist in 2019, Paul has reported on everything from local news stories to those with national and even international dimensions. Following a stint at a local paper that saw him cover that year’s UK General Election, Paul turned a long-standing interest in advanced technologies into a career – by joining the 3D Printing Industry team.

While writing news, features, and interview pieces for the publication, Paul became better acquainted with the disruptive potential of both 3D printing and 3D scanning. During his time at the publication, Paul also covered and spoke at industry events like Formnext, Rapid+TCT, and IMTS, quickly becoming an authoritative voice for those working in the sector.

Paul has a keen interest in the automotive and aerospace fields – and over the years, this has been reflected in his work. After his graduation from Kingston University with a Master’s Degree in journalism, Paul went on to cover racing series like NASCAR and Formula 1, as well as popular British showcases such as the Goodwood Festival of Speed. Likewise, he has been fortunate enough to report live from exhibitions like the Farnborough Air Show, where manufacturing technologies continue to be pushed to the absolute limit.

Aiming to get ever-closer access to such technological innovation, Paul has left the British Isles and begun a new European adventure at Artec 3D. As part of the Artec team, he now curates content for those seeking to better understand how 3D scanning works, where it’s beginning to be applied, and how it continues to break boundaries across industries.

When he’s not writing about 3D scanning, Paul is likely playing football, cheering on a race car driver, or clutching a dictionary while trying to order a cup of tea in another language.

Latest articles

Learning center
Face scanning

What’s the best 3D face scanner in 2024?

With the proliferation of modern camera-equipped smartphones, it’s now easier than ever to 3D scan someone’s face, to create a virtual avatar or for 3D printing into novelty items. But face scanning isn’t just for having fun.

Case studies
Patrick Thorn Digital Twins

Artec Leo & Ray-captured digital twin transforms pea processing efficiency

With Artec 3D scanning, Dodman Ltd. has created an incredibly detailed factory digital twin, and used this as a basis for building a new less wasteful food processing workflow.

Case studies
Catesby Projects

Catesby Projects chasing lap time gains for elite racing teams with Artec 3D scanning

With 3D scanning and CFD simulation, Catesby Projects is helping championship-winning race teams ensure they have the optimal setup from the moment they hit the track.

Case studies
Shadowtor Studios

Artifacts turned into Time Team TV show and video game props with Artec 3D scanning

Working with video game developers at Shadow Tor Studios and the University of Plymouth, Time Team is making history learning more engaging for 21st century audiences.

Case studies
Kurio 3D

Kurio 3D tailors compression leggings for Premier League stars with Artec 3D scanning

Kurio 3D has developed a way of using Artec Leo and a proprietary algorithm to tailor compression leggings, so they improve blood flow in the legs of elite footballers.

Case studies
Airshaper

Multi-resolution Leo & Artec Ray II 3D scanning unlocks fuel efficiency gains

Simulation firm Airshaper has fed a truck scan captured with unprecedented detail using Artec Leo and Ray II into its CFD platform to identify new ways of improving its fuel efficiency.