CES 2015: Using HP Sprout

CES 2015: Using HP Sprout

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “CES 2015: Using HP Sprout”.
We decided to embark on recreating an instructional origami book in an interactive manner, taking advantage of both the camera and the dual screens, so the application itself starts with recognition of your paper and making use of both of the screens. You get not only instructions on the top in terms of both text instructions, but also a 3d representation of the folded paper but, more importantly, get come to blend reality. Mix of having the step projected directly onto your paper, which lines up exactly with the size of the paper, so you can test your folds as you go along, so each step in the process matches up exactly with the next step in the process. So now what I’m going to do is scan in one of my flowers to make the O on my sprout. So I will go in here to capture set the flower down press capture.

CES 2015: Using HP Sprout

This is the oh, so I’m can manipulate it and make it a bit larger here and then I already have a few flower pieces on the side. So I’m going to bring these in to complete my are, and I can simply manipulate it and add to my s: I’m call entrenar. I am a creative director at oddfellows, which is a design and animation company located in San Francisco. I came here today to create something with a sprout from a designer’s perspective.

CES 2015: Using HP Sprout

I decided to bring a bunch of construction paper and reconstruct a photo. I took this construction paper and i cut out a bunch of shapes using an exacto knife and a few different templates. I scan those into the sprout digitize them, threw them into this workspace and assemble them together. So in my business I spend a lot of time taking a digital object and giving it a handmade feel.

CES 2015: Using HP Sprout

So what I like about the sprout is that I can digitize a practical object that already has that tangible quality and and get that for free in the digital space. .