It's a newborn Great Icosihemidodecahedron
Posted: Tue Sep 16, 2014 10:07 pm
Finally finished my first model using Stella, a Great Icosiwhatsis (see title). Experts among you will see how clumsy I have been.
- The model is way smaller than I expected. In the 3rd image you see a ball-point pen for scale. With all the paper it used, I was anticipating something more imposing!
- The paper is much too thick, as Rob warned me. In the past I just butted edges together, so I needed the thickness. With double tabs it's way too heavy.
- In the nets, I drew in lines for the edge segments that coincide with decagram faces. "I like it like that!" As I said in another post, I imported the PDF nets into CorelDraw, drew the lines in by hand, then exported back to PDF for printing. It's easy to do this when you the software gives you automatic snap-to-node and snap-to-intersection.
- It was fun choosing colors, though here again I have been clumsy. In fact I think two of the dark blue faces are the same color! I used Color Explorer (free, from a Danish guy) to choose the color sets. If someone has a better suggestion for color-choosing software I would be interested to hear. The crucial element is the capacity to view all the colors of your color set at once and modify each one. Color Explorer lets you do this, though the interface is a bit cuckoo.
- I intentionally chose similar but darker color for triangles and their antipodal faces. So there's a "light side" and a "dark side." If I had been more careful you would see this better.
For a first try it's OK I guess. Thanks for your support and information! When I get back to China and settle down (someplace, with someone) I'll get to work on other models.
Anyhow, here it is.



- The model is way smaller than I expected. In the 3rd image you see a ball-point pen for scale. With all the paper it used, I was anticipating something more imposing!

- The paper is much too thick, as Rob warned me. In the past I just butted edges together, so I needed the thickness. With double tabs it's way too heavy.
- In the nets, I drew in lines for the edge segments that coincide with decagram faces. "I like it like that!" As I said in another post, I imported the PDF nets into CorelDraw, drew the lines in by hand, then exported back to PDF for printing. It's easy to do this when you the software gives you automatic snap-to-node and snap-to-intersection.
- It was fun choosing colors, though here again I have been clumsy. In fact I think two of the dark blue faces are the same color! I used Color Explorer (free, from a Danish guy) to choose the color sets. If someone has a better suggestion for color-choosing software I would be interested to hear. The crucial element is the capacity to view all the colors of your color set at once and modify each one. Color Explorer lets you do this, though the interface is a bit cuckoo.
- I intentionally chose similar but darker color for triangles and their antipodal faces. So there's a "light side" and a "dark side." If I had been more careful you would see this better.
For a first try it's OK I guess. Thanks for your support and information! When I get back to China and settle down (someplace, with someone) I'll get to work on other models.
Anyhow, here it is.


