Repairing a severely damaged human face is never easy, but an Anchorage surgeon and a mechanical engineering professor from UAA shaved hours off the challenge with computer software and 3-D modeling.
At Waseda University, researchers are developing a 3D face generation process that requires no special equipment. It combines 3D measurement data from thousands of faces with a single photograph to ...
SpaghetMeNot releases normalMagic 1.0, a Blender add-on with 16 modifiers for advanced mesh normal control. Features include ...
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