Restoring China's Forbidden City With 3-D Printing 46
First time accepted submitter jcho5 writes "China's 600-year-old Forbidden City is looking less forbidding these days. As part of a major restoration, the Chinese Palace museum will use 3D-Printers to re-manufacture and replicate many of the city's most precious and unique objects. From the article: 'PhD student Fangjin Zhang—along with her colleagues at Loughborough Design School in the East Midlands of England—had, for a number of years, been looking into the use of 3D printing as means to restore sculptures and archaeological relics. According to a Loughborough press release, Zhang developed a “formalized approach tailored specifically to the restoration of historic artifacts.” After reviewing Zhang’s techniques, the Palace Museum then invited Loughborough researchers to repair several Forbidden City artifacts, including the ceiling and enclosure of a pavilion in the Emperor Chanlong Garden.'"
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dont go there man just dont go there its called forbdin for a reason probaly so just dont go there plz or else the ghosts will get u
-1 insipid?
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As a child I used to ride my bicycle on the snowmobile trails behind old Mr. Booth's property. For years, whenever I came upon a section of trail adorned with a large "DANGER! DO NOT ENTER" sign, I would freak out, hop off my bike, and run away as fast as I could. What could be so dangerous behind that sign, I wondered? Bears? Something from that Poe-inspired book of scary tales that the older kids used to read at camp? An FBI sting operation with a shoot-to-kill directive? I had no idea, but I didn't want
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Scan.. Repair... Print... (Score:5, Informative)
burned (Score:4, Insightful)
Sadly, Mao and the cultural revolution burned a good percentage of China's history. Things connected to the old dynasties were fare game. Much of their 5,000 year history went in to the fire and they did it to themselves.
Re:burned (Score:5, Informative)
Most of the artifacts of the Forbidden City are in Taiwan, Republic of China (ROC), so they escaped the Cultural Revolution.
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The application that came to mind for me (but not in TFA) is duplicating those artifacts in Taiwan so that they can be displayed in the real Forbidden City. (This is China, so people have to be relaxed about authenticity anyway.)
The artifacts under curation in Taiwan are exhibited at the National Palace Museum [wikipedia.org].
Interesting bit from that Wikipedia article:
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Most of the artifacts of the Forbidden City are in Taiwan, Republic of China (ROC), so they escaped the Cultural Revolution.
Stolen, in modern vernacular.
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That depends on which side of the history you are familiar with. At the time the nationalist ROC government is the "rightful" sovereign state of China, and the communist party is the rebel. That's what I was taught.
It's funny because if you were from mainland China, they claim the nationalist to be the rebel.
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yes but that isn't what tfa is about. a lot of the forbidden city is crumbling away by accident. all the walkway rail for example are carved soapstone. super easy to carve beautifuly but after a couple hundred years of rain the figures are sad blobs.
Durability (Score:2)
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why be concerned? the plastic replicas have no historic value, and presumably one would keep
both the digital model and the original artifact.
print a new one when it wears out, or when processes and materials have improved.
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Doc: No wonder this circuit failed. It says "Made in Japan".
Marty McFly: What do you mean, Doc? All the best stuff is made in Japan.
Doc: Unbelievable.
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Well, the fact is, people buy imports from places like China because the manufacturing is cheap. Cheaper than domestic production. Sure, the Chinese manufacturers could build to the standards of (say) American manufacturing, but at that point, once you factor in overseas training, import costs, etc, you lose the advantage of having your products made in China.
The Chinese government knows this and artificially depresses the value of Chinese currency in order to keep exports up. It's hard to say what Chinese
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2K years old and looking good: call us in 3776AD.. (Score:2)
Some may disagree with you. [bbc.co.uk] Chinese lacquerware can last 2000 years and be worth an awful lot of money. If you're writing from the USA, give us a call in the year 3776 and let us know how you're getting on with your crockery...
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Durability is a non-issue. You can always mold your plastic copy and make a cast with whatever material you want.
The value of 3D-printing is that it is the cheapest way to turn a 3D-model into a real life object. And it is detailed too.
Quite interesting (Score:1)
However, they do have a lot of photos, tapestries and paintings of the pre-Boxer rebellion palace. It's quite interesting that we're at a point now where we can take those photos and use them to recreate on a 1:1 scale items that would otherwise have been lost to us, even if they are just recreations.
Bit of a problem here (Score:1)
Part of the point of these things is that it took a fuckton of effort to make them. The ten thousand layers of laquer on some of the laquer art, for example. Then there's the difference between art and replicas. Some people won't notice, others will but not know what's the matter, and to figure out what you need an expert. The thing is, 3d printers can do a lot, but the je ne sais quoi that makes art you can't replicate with a scan and a machine. Or even with good training and a steady hand.
There's a point
Museums of the Future? (Score:2)
How long before museums routinely use 3D printing to replicate items that are damaged or considered too fragile to be on display, or too valuable? Once you start "replacing" the missing parts, you're rewriting history. I know the Chinese would never censor or rewrite anything, bu
A fair point, but as for the past... (Score:2, Interesting)
Once you start "replacing" the missing parts, you're rewriting history.
Are you?
I'd wager that the majority of people living today still falsely believe that the Greeks and Romans were all about boring unpainted statues, thanks to the false impressions given by not repairing damage.
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Emperoro Chanlong? (Score:2)
Never heard of him. I think it should be either Ch'ien-lung (Wade-Giles) or Qianlong (Pinyin)......
Outgassing (Score:2, Insightful)
As a former museum professional, the main problem I foresee is damage to real artifacts being caused by outgassing of the cheap plastics usually used in 3D printing applications. Outgassing and leaching of unstable compound are two of the main reasons preservationists generally are very careful to employ inert (and often extremely expensive) materials when restoring the fabric of fragile historic objects.
Open source the files? (Score:3)
Just a thought - does anyone think that China or the Smithsonian will make the scans available to the public?
There's a large number of 3-d printers in the hobby scene. It'd be very neat to be able to download files and print your own replica work of art.