Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures

Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures
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An employee cleans a 3D-printed figure at a 3D printing company in Seoul, South Korea. (Reiters)
Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures
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A man prepares for 3D photoscanning for his 3D-printed figure at a 3D printing company in Seoul, South Korea. (Reuters)
Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures
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3D-printed figures are seen at a 3D printing company in Seoul, South Korea, August 5, 2016.(Reuters)
Updated 06 August 2016
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Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures

Forget selfies: South Koreans capture moments with 3D figures

SEOUL: Shooting photographs and storing them digitally has become old school for South Koreans taking imagery to the next level with three-dimensional (3D) figures of themselves, as well as their babies and pets.
“I really wanted a 3D figure of my son to show him when he’s older what I can’t capture in photos right now,” said 31-year-old Lim Su-jung, who was with her two-year-old at a studio in Seoul run by Ioys, a 3D figure printing firm launched in 2014 and due to open its fifth South Korean location on Saturday.
“He’s at that time in his life where he’s doing so many cute things,” she said.
To make the figure, Lim placed her toddler in a column-shaped booth where more than 100 cameras simultaneously snapped two-dimensional photos from all angles.
The printing is done at a plant in Seoul where the photos form a digital blueprint for a machine that builds figures ranging from 5 cm (2 inches) to 30 cm (12 inches) in height using more than 1,000 layers of gypsum powder.
The one-of-a-kind figures start at 110,000 won ($100) and can cost three times that or more.
“We have couples, families, babies and animals who visit our studios,” said Lee Si-cheon, an assistant manager at Ioys.
“And some people who are in love with themselves.”