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JesterArts

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  • Website URL
    http://istockphoto.com/index.php?refnum=LeoBlanchette

Profile Information

  • Location
    Maine
  • Interests
    3d, vector, 3d...pie...
  • College Major/Degree
    School of Hard Knocks Master's Degree
  • Favorite Area of Science
    Hitch-Hicker's Guide to the Galaxy
  • Biography
    I don't know math but have a theory...
  • Occupation
    Designer.

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  1. Hello peeps, I'm here to ask for help! I'm undertaking a large project of creating high quality 3d models and images for the use of educators and enthusiasts. They are going to be realistic 3d visualizations of the Wardenclyffe Tower, which was meant to house Nikola Tesla's magnifying transmitter. PROBLEM: There is very little accurate reference on this subject. Only historical pictures of low graphic quality. I've found some semi-detailed visual references, but only on certain sections of the unfinished structure. SOLUTION: I am looking for people of appropriate skills, such as engineering or drafting, to help collect and layout accurate details the transmitter to accurate proportion based on the reference existing in our day (which is not much). This means having to use an amount of discernment in anticipating how things would have been done on the original invention where the photograph references obscure the details. Also knowing to a fair degree what the key instrument (the magnifying transmiter) that it housed would have looked like. I will be creating accurate 3d models around these. Project Goals: 1. Fully realistic 3d images of the tower and accompanying lab rendered from various angles, plus an image to replicate this traditional photograph: 2. Cut away views of finished tower/inner workings. 3. Back in the day, there was an artistic rendering of what the finished tower would look like. I will be adding these details as well to the model, also replicating a traditional concept. 4. A creative visualization of what a tower like this would look like if created in the near future based on design trends. If you know someone who would be interested please have them contact me through my website, facebook, etc. Anyone who helps will be credited. It can be more than one person, even a community effort. I am open to many scenerios, and I am a proven illustrator, so do not hesitate to seriously consider being a part of this if you are capable. A website will be created around the finished product giving credit to all involved. This will be a free work, but credit will go to those helping. The Blender 3d Model and accompanying work will also be released to the public under conditions that allow it to remain genuine. Blog Post on the subject: http://leoblanchette.vox.com/library/post/wardenclyffe-tower----nikola-teslas-dream-of-wireless-energy-transmission.html?_c=feed-atom My skill is as an illustrator, not a draftsman or engineer. It would be fairly impractical for me to attempt this without qualified help on the above mentioned things. Thank you for your consideration. Leo PS - Not only am I a Nikola Tesla admirer but I am also transitioning to architectural visualization, and this seemed like the perfect project. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedSomehow this thread posted itself twice, so if one is deleted, this is the one I want to keep. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedThe Facebook group created for this project: http://www.facebook.com/groups/create.php?success=1&customize&gid=85230169207#/group.php?gid=85230169207&ref=nf Contact me also: Leo@JesterArts.net
  2. Hello peeps, I'm here to ask for help! I'm taking it upon myself to create some images of high quality for the use of educators and enthusiasts. They are going to be realistic 3d visualizations of the wardenclyffe tower, Nikola Tesla's magnifying transmitter. PROBLEM: There is virtually NO accurate reference on this subject. Only historical pictures of low graphic quality. I've found some decent quality detailed graphics, but only on certain sections of the unfinished structure. SOLUTION: I am looking for a gifted engineer or someone of related skill to help draft the transmitter to accurate proportion based on the reference existing in our day (which is not much). This means having to use an amount of discernment in anticipating how things would have been done on the original invention where the photograph references obscure the details. Also knowing to a fair degree what the key instrument (the magnifying transmiter) that it housed would have looked. Project Goals: 1. Fully realistic 3d images of the tower and accompanying lab rendered from various angles, plus an image to replicate this traditional photograph: 2. Cut away views of finished tower/inner workings. 3. Back in the day, there was an artistic rendering of what the finished tower would look like. I will be adding these details as well to the model, also replicating a traditional concept. 4. A creative visualization of what a tower like this would look like if created in the near future based on design trends. If you know someone who would be interested please have them contact me through my website, facebook, etc. Anyone who helps will be credited. It can be more than one person, even a community effort. I am open to many scenerios, and I am a proven illustrator, so do not hesitate to seriously considering being a part of this if you are capable. A website will be created around the finished product giving credit to all involved. This will be a free work, but credit will go to those helping. The Blender 3d Model and accompanying work will also be released to the public under conditions that allow it to remain genuine. Blog Post on the subject: http://leoblanchette.vox.com/library/post/wardenclyffe-tower----nikola-teslas-dream-of-wireless-energy-transmission.html?_c=feed-atom My skill is as an illustrator, not a draftsman or engineer. It would be fairly impractical for me to attempt this without qualified help on the above mentioned things. Thank you for your consideration. Leo
  3. I detect some humor here, but isn't it true that the abstract (pattern based) ability to do math is not related to the ability to add, subtract, multiply, etc?
  4. For an understanding of magnetic fields and waves, as they are relevant to typical electrical sciences (and perhaps to some degree light) I was wondering if a knowledge of calculus should be all thats necessary to understand the mathematical aspect of it. On that note, if I am to understand Einstein's papers, what else should I learn? I'd like to know what other maths I should pursue to have a decent grasp of the above things.
  5. Thank you, that was actually very helpful.
  6. Or the they can be called "order of precedence"? I'd like to know why this is necessary -- how was it established. I'm making it a point to understand the necessity behind these things so I'm not just blindly following rules. You know...so my math skills are more intuitive. I'm asking for a relative, so Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally. ...I couldn't resist throwing a corny joke in there.
  7. Hey, I just resized a lot of my illustrations to Avatar Size! http://www.flickr.com/photos/14304964@N05/sets/72157603878486870/ There's 160 to choose from, between robots to interesting semi-professional orange characters. E-mail me and let me know which one you use! Leo
  8. Thanks. I should probobly disregard most of Douglas Adam's ideas then! Thats a relief, thanks. Hitchhiker's Guide is gospel to me again.
  9. You could try illustration!
  10. "It is known that there are an infinite number of worlds, simply because there is an infinite amount of space for them to be in. However, not every one of them is inhabited. Therefore, there must be a finite number of inhabited worlds. Any finite number divided by infinity is as near to nothing as makes no odds, so the average population of all the planets in the Universe can be said to be zero. From this it follows that the population of the whole Universe is zero, and that any people you may meet from time to time are merely the products of a deranged imagination." -- Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Sorry, couldn't resist.
  11. Good enough. Thanks a lot! I suppose the universe would get boring pretty quick if it were other than you say.
  12. Thanks. Tell me...I find with many things I've undertaken to learn, once you get so far into it, things start to become second-nature, and climbing levels in skill is not so hard. I've found this true in 3d and vector art. Could the same be said of mathematics, or is it always a pain?
  13. This is my online shopping list: Free graphing calculator (open source?) all the bells and whistles, capable of most anything mathematical. Online mathematics course, free. Brings you from intermediate to advanced, in most math forms. Finally got the time to learn! Thanks.
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