Tiny details created with speed.
Highlighting Zoopla’s impressive portfolio of properties for sale or rent on a miniature scale meant each townhouse and country cottage had to be the size of a matchbox. This requirement made traditional hand model-making close to impossible, especially given the project’s time constraints. But by using 3D printing and the multi-material capabilities of the Connex3, Tayler and his team were able to customize every tiny house design with ease and realistic details. “With 3D printing, we could work with minute details like individual tiles, or roof or brick texture that was only 30 mm across with no compromise on the precision,” Tayler said. In addition to creating intricate details for the “shell” homes, Tayler and his team also knew the 3D printed shells had to be suitable alternatives to the real thing for the stars of the ad, the hermit crabs. “We were keen to ensure the shells weren’t rejected, and wouldn’t harm the crabs,” Tayler said.
To make certain the models replicated shells hermit crabs would actually want to call home, Tayler and his team obtained shells on-site in Costa Rica and created exact 3D scans with a laser scanner. With little time to take the design from scan to prototype to final model ready for filming, Tayler’s team knew 3D printing was the only viable option. “It was clear that it would have been impossible to achieve the level of realism required in such a short time frame with conventional, model-making,” Tayler said. “This was always a job for 3D printing.”