| Also called a skeletal phone, manufactured by the Ericcson company (now part of Sony) from the late 1800s through the early 1900s. The original phone was magneto-powered; electricity was generated by turning a hand-crank on the side of the base. Crosley currently sells a reproduction that is electric. Model is highly detailed and constructed so that moving parts (dial, magneto crank, handle, cord) can be animated. All textures except the black base and brass accents (also included) are UV mapped using 3072x3072 color, bump, and alpha maps that allow 8 1/2 x 11 print rendering at full bleed. Jpegs can be easily downsampled in Photoshop or another photo editing program if you don't need to render that large. Note to .fbx and .3ds users: Due to differences in the way 3d programs handle surfacing and texturing, certain material properties, such as Diffuse and Specular, may need to be adjusted to attain results like those shown. Model is compatible with both earlier and later versions of LightWave. |