Basically, it's a machine that makes portraits from the image the picture takes.
Because if you want to draw people, you have to ask them to stand there forever, and that's no fun on their wedding day. I want to capture lots of images all at once without interrupting their happy day, then the machine can just draw all the pictures out for me much faster, so I can give them as a gift!
And maybe someone's not very good at drawing - not me, I'm amazing - but future customers!
Yes, exactly! The duplicate pictures don't have to be life-sized, so the machine doesn't have to be big. Think like a flat portrait that could fit on the page of a book, or a couple that could go on a single sketchbook page.
This way you could capture important memories, and then keep them in a neat little book to look at whenever you want. Or hang some up on a wall. Like family pictures.
I've only learned about the printed presses here, so this will certainly be a jump in my knowledge. But perhaps... Something that can receive the data like how we send pictures and videos to each through the phones...
[Great, he's already thinking about this THANKS NIMONA.]
Yes! So it's a little like that. You put inkwells of different color on a bar, it moves across the paper and mixes colors to create the image. It sprays very tiny dots of ink to form the picture.
As for how it knows what the picture is, it has to communicate with the device that took the picture. Sort of how the shellphones talk to each other. The printer has the job of figuring how to translate that picture into the tiny dots of color.
You can get away with just four different colors of ink; cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. More complicated, you add orange and green.
[ Nimona will deliver him a whole notebook of drawings in a pink pencil, with little notes about what it is and what it does. Laser-shooting crossbows, laser-shooting cannons, laser blades (that are more like gunblades), flying horseless carts, mechanical arms, a subway train. There's more mundane stuff - a coffee maker, televisions, electronic locks with digital touchpads, computers, blow torch, power saw (it's a weird collection since she has no idea what all he might even have knowledge of).
Every page has a pink Nimona animal with a text bubble that describes the device as best she can. ]
[Good Greagor, Nimona this is a lot of stuff??? A lot of it also going over his head??? But it does also intrigue him, so he will take the notebook happily and we'll see what comes of it!!]
no subject
So you, say, take a picture. And then you want a machine to draw it for you...? Why not just draw it yourself to begin with?
no subject
Because if you want to draw people, you have to ask them to stand there forever, and that's no fun on their wedding day. I want to capture lots of images all at once without interrupting their happy day, then the machine can just draw all the pictures out for me much faster, so I can give them as a gift!
And maybe someone's not very good at drawing - not me, I'm amazing - but future customers!
no subject
He's trying to understand this...]
So you what you're saying is you would have an original picture or photo...and this machine would be able to create duplicates based off it?
[He thinks he's understanding it now.]
no subject
This way you could capture important memories, and then keep them in a neat little book to look at whenever you want. Or hang some up on a wall. Like family pictures.
no subject
[Great, he's already thinking about this THANKS NIMONA.]
no subject
[ Her evil scheme is working, then. If she catches his interest, then chances are better that he'll work on it! ]
no subject
Don't suppose you know of how these "printers" are designed where you're from?
no subject
Have you been introduced to a typewriter yet? Surely this world has those somewhere.
no subject
no subject
As for how it knows what the picture is, it has to communicate with the device that took the picture. Sort of how the shellphones talk to each other. The printer has the job of figuring how to translate that picture into the tiny dots of color.
You can get away with just four different colors of ink; cyan, magenta, yellow, and black. More complicated, you add orange and green.
no subject
And it works just like that? That really is quite the invention, and I can see how it would be useful.
[.............Hm.]
This may be outside my area of current expertise, but I could still look into it.
no subject
[ Nimona plops her chin into her hand, eyes alight with excitement. ]
Outsourcing, I like it. I just thought I'd see if you were interested in trying your hand at making it.
no subject
Still, if you could perhaps send me a few more drawings so I can have better visual idea, that will help greatly.
no subject
Don't worry, I'm great at drawing! You'll have Nimona pinkprints in no time.
[ Get it? Because she's pink and her drawings are going to be in pink. ]
no subject
Even if not, they can bring some inspiration either way. So I'll be looking forward to it.
no subject
[ Nimona will deliver him a whole notebook of drawings in a pink pencil, with little notes about what it is and what it does. Laser-shooting crossbows, laser-shooting cannons, laser blades (that are more like gunblades), flying horseless carts, mechanical arms, a subway train. There's more mundane stuff - a coffee maker, televisions, electronic locks with digital touchpads, computers, blow torch, power saw (it's a weird collection since she has no idea what all he might even have knowledge of).
Every page has a pink Nimona animal with a text bubble that describes the device as best she can. ]
no subject
no subject