Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. La Salle

Publication date

2013-05-13



Abstract

A paper sliceform or lattice-style pop-up is a form of papercraft that uses two sets of parallel paper patches slotted together to make a foldable structure. The structure can be folded flat, as well as fully opened (popped-up) to make the two sets of patches orthogonal to each other. Automatic design of paper sliceforms is still not supported by existing computational models and remains a challenge. We propose novel geometric formulations of valid paper sliceform designs that consider the stability, flat-foldability and physical realizability of the designs. Based on a set of sufficient construction conditions, we also present an automatic algorithm for generating valid sliceform designs that closely depict the given 3D solid models. By approximating the input models using a set of generalized cylinders, our method significantly reduces the search space for stable and flat-foldable sliceforms. To ensure the physical realizability of the designs, the algorithm automatically generates slots or slits on the patches such that no two cycles embedded in two different patches are interlocking each other. This guarantees local pairwise assembility between patches, which is empirically shown to lead to global assembility. Our method has been demonstrated on a number of example models, and the output designs have been successfully made into real paper sliceforms.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

Pages

29 p.

Publisher

IEEE

Published in

IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. Vol. 19, Nú. 11, Novembre 2013

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Rights

© 2013, IEEE. Tots els drets reservats

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

La Salle [1048]