Papercraft Panoramas
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Reference
David Swart: Papercraft Panoramas. In: Bridges 2013. Pages 411–414
DOI
Abstract
This paper surveys several papercraft projects that were created for the purpose of showcasing spherical imagery such as spherical panoramas, planets, and soccer ball designs.
Extended Abstract
Bibtex
Used References
[1] Philip Chapman-Bell. Jasmine Tea Cube, Opus ∞±1. http://www.flickr.com/photos/oschene/4705324623/. Accessed 03/12/2013.
[2] Kelly Delp, William Thurston. Playing with Surfaces: Spheres, Monkey Pants, and Zippergons. In Bridges 2011: Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture:1-8. 2011.
[3] Daniel M. Germán, Lloyd Burchill, Alexandre Duret-Lutz, Sébastien Pérez-Duarte, Emmanuel Pérez-Duarte, Josh Sommers: Flattening the Viewable Sphere. In Computational Aesthetics 2007:23-28. 2007.
[4] George Hart. “Slide-Together” Geometric Paper Constructions. In Bridges for Teachers, Teachers for Bridges, 2004 Workshop Book:31-42. 2004.
[5] L. P. Lee. The Conformal Tetrahedric Projection with some Practical Applications. In The Cartographic Journal:10(1):22-28. 1973.
[6] Chris K. Palmer. SlideTab. http://www.shadowfolds.com/SlideTab. Accessed 03/07/2013.
[7] David Swart. Using Turtles and Skeletons to Display the Viewable Sphere. In Bridges 2009: Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture:39-46. 2009.
[8] David Swart, Bruce Torrence. Mathematics Meets Photography. Math Horizons, 19(1):14–17 and 19(2):24–27. 2011.
[9] Lloyd Burchill. Flexify 2. http://www.flamingpear.com/flexify.html. Accessed 03/07/2013.
Links
Full Text
http://archive.bridgesmathart.org/2013/bridges2013-411.pdf