'Dr. Skully' Skulls |
This is a fairly accurate model of a skull. The large version has separate molded teeth, the mandible is hinged to the cranium, and is hollow. The smaller version has less details — but both are really nice.
It's always a challenge getting a good photograph. Since a visitor to the website can't pick up, examine and such — the picture's job is a tough one. The picture needs to communicate to the view all the details about the object, the color, size, textures. It's lucky that a 'picture is worth a thousand words,' as one needs all one thousand words for this to work best.
I always want something in the photos to give scale — here I have the skulls on a table with a ruler and a hemostat as props. A window off to the left gives natural light, and a table lamp gives warm light from above.
I pasted in a photo of the inside and taken apart views as I limited the website to one photograph.
Here is one of the shots I took of the skulls disassembled. I needed to show how these skulls 'work' and at this point I was undecided if I was going to stick with the one photograph or not.
I always want something in the photos to give scale — here I have the skulls on a table with a ruler and a hemostat as props. A window off to the left gives natural light, and a table lamp gives warm light from above.
I pasted in a photo of the inside and taken apart views as I limited the website to one photograph.
Dr. Skully Skulls Disassembled |
This shows the skulls 'open' and the spring that holds the mandible to the cranium. The jaws are able to be opened and closed — just like the real thing. The skull 'cap' on the big skull is held in place with rods and magnets, the small guy just has the rods.
Dr. Skull Disassembled |
Dr. Skully Skulls |
Those look awesome!
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