Open Menu
AllLocalCommunitiesAbout
lotide
AllLocalCommunitiesAbout
Login

Digging Into PlantStudio, an odd little plant creation program, a Bit Late

⁨22⁩ ⁨likes⁩

Submitted ⁨⁨8⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago⁩ by ⁨ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net⁩ to ⁨retronet@lemmy.sdf.org⁩

https://pketh.org/plantstudio.html

source

Comments

Sort:hotnewtop
  • hahattpro@lemmy.world ⁨4⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

    I text dump for those who don’t want, can’t click the link.

    source
  • hahattpro@lemmy.world ⁨4⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

    About Archives RSS Kinopio Oct ’24 Digging Into PlantStudio, a Bit Late learning design This aesthetic screenshot of an old windows app has been in my inspiration space for ~5 years. Until recently, I assumed that it was just a nostalgia bait concept.

    The calm, serene life associated with gardening pairs suspiciously well with rose-tinted wistfulness for a simpler time in computing. I’m happy to be wrong though, because software doesn’t get more real than PlantStudio.

    Written by Kurtz-Fernhout Software, PlantStudio is a surprisingly deep botany simulator for creating and arranging 3D models of herbaceous plants based on how real plants grow, change, fruit, and flower, over their life cycles.

    How to Install Because the last release of the app was in 2002, and it was for Windows 95/98/2000/NT4, we’ve got a little bit of work to do to get it running on macOS:

    Download PlantStudio210.zip and unzip it Download Whisky to run windows code in a container called a bottle In Whisky, click + button to create a new bottle (I set it to Windows 10) Click Open C: Drive and copy the PlantStudio210 folder into Program Files Click Run and open Program Files/PlantStudio210/PlantStudio.exe PlantStudio lives again 🌱🌺

    Let’s Grow Some 3D Plants After you read or skip the tutorial docs, you’re be greeted with an empty window, which is kind of like the ‘garden’ that your plants will live in. One way to jump in is to File → Open some sample files.

    The interface is full of unlabelled and unfamiliar icons, but the hover tooltips in PlantStudio are the most verbose I’ve ever seen – which helps a lot.

    Rotate mode tooltip To fill the garden with our own herbs, shrubs, and flowers, use Plant → Create New… which opens the thorough 10-step Plant Wizard, and teaches us some biology terms along the way.

    Going through the Plant Wizard… Each option button has a detailed little illustration that makes the impacts of technical concepts, like ‘inflorescence’, easy to understand.

    I also love the wizard progress icons in the footer. Because the colors match the button illustrations, it’s easy to jump from editing stems and leaves (green icons), to editing flower related options (purple icons). The start and stop traffic lights for the intro and confirmation steps serve as cute bookends.

    Designers can use color to conceptually link related interfaces together. I did this when I redesigned Futureland a couple years ago.

    One thing I kept wishing for while creating plants was the ability to see a live preview while I was selecting options. Maybe they didn’t think of that, or maybe the performance impacts would’ve been too much for the minimum required 100MHz CPU of the day.

    Cultivating a Garden As you create plants, they’ll appear in the garden area, where you can arrange them by scaling, rotating, editing, posing, and even changing their age.

    It took awhile, but by repeatedly creating plants in the wizard and arranging each one, even I could make something pleasant enough:

    I could’ve probably saved some time by selecting one or multiple plants to Plant → Breed to create offspring. The Breeder lets you define how similar the children are from their parents, and adjust the amount of mutation (random chance changes).

    Export Options You can be creative with your plants models by exporting jpg, 3ds, or obj files into other art apps. The official Gallery has a couple y2k-era masterpieces that were composed with whimsical 3D tools like Bryce, and then polished in 2D art tools like Paintshop Pro and Photoshop.

    Artist’s note: “I created this picture with Metacreations Poser3, Bryce3 and Photoshop5. I used Photoshop5 to give the violet leaves some texture, and refined the shape of the leaves and petals…” (source) The process for making these images is strikingly similar to what landscape architects do today. Much like how software designers use mockups, architects use 3D renderings to convince clients, to market their work, and as a starting point for working with contractors.

    (source, Plantkind) Also, plants look really cool inside Kinopio spaces. Maybe I’ll figure out some kind of ‘integration’ in the future…

    So Why Am I Only Finding Out About Plantstudio Now? The husband and wife duo Paul Fernhout and Cynthia Kurtz were the authors behind Kurtz-Fernhout Software. Unsurprisingly, both have degrees in Biology and Ecology.

    Their original goal was to build a gardening simulator to “help people understand how to garden in a more sustainable way in their own backyards”. The simulation was based the EPIC (Erosion/Productivity Impact Calculator) agricultural model by the USDA Agricultural Research Service.

    We worked as a team on most design phases of the project. Paul did most of the low-level coding, the general architecture, the undo/redo system, the file system, the graphical display, and the 3D turtle engine. Cynthia did most of the translation of the EPIC model, the flowering/fruiting submodel, the plant drawing algorithm, the various window designs, and the artwork, music, and documentation.

    PlantStudio was originally built to draw plants for the gardening simulator, but they “found that everyone tended to like the plant designer so much they wanted to play with it instead of with the garden simulator”, so released it separately.

    Not entirely dissimilar to the story behind SimCity,

    While developing his first commercial game […], Will Wright noticed that designing city maps for the player to fly over in a helicopter was more fun than actually [playing the game]. He began expanding his world-building tools as an experiment. He applied various urban planning and computer modelling theories, implementing whatever ideas he’d been reading.

    Sticking to the theme, SimCity for Windows (source) Unfortunately, PlantStudio was discontinued in 2002,

    What happened to our old software and the plans for it? We spent years working for other people to pay off money (with interest) we borrowed to finish it and free it.

    I empathize with their story because the world is rarely kind to organic niche creative consumer software. I’m sure the market at the time was a lot more developer friendly overall, but businesses need to always be reaching new people to sell more licenses.

    In an alternate universe, maybe PlantStudio could have survived by evolving into a game in the vein of SimCity and SimEarth, e.g. ‘SimGarden’.

    Incidental Beauty There’s something appealing about objects and interfaces built for purpose, like race cars and professional-use espresso machines. In cases like these, beauty feels like a byproduct of an object built to do it’s job well – and there’s something appealingly genuine about that.

    Back when I worked at Fog Creek Software there was a $10k Marzocco professional espresso machine in the break room that we were trained on as part of our onboarding. I don’t even like espresso, but I do miss using it sometimes. I’d describe PlantStudio the same way. It doesn’t look or work like a modern app, but anyone can figure it out because it’s interface elements are delightfully chunky, unfussy, and well documented by illustrations, inline text, and tooltips.

    It’s definetely not for everyone, but the best things rarely are. Creating those gardens gave me a new perspective – and some new ideas – for my own design work.

    It took a while, but I’m glad I found PlantStudio.

    Special thanks to Lily from Plantkind for giving me a bit of insight into his landscape architecture practice for this post.

    Comments… name* email* website comment* (markdown supported)

    Subscribe to Updates

    Or, discuss this post on Hacker News

    Subscribe to the RSS feed, Follow updates on Mastodon or Twitter/X.

    If you liked this, you might also enjoy Saying Bye to GlitchThe Lo-Fi Art and Human Tools EraTowards a Better Whiteboard

    Subscribe to New Posts by Email

    space@jam.com

    Subscribe I make Kinopio, the thinking canvas for whiteboarding, research, moodboards, and note-taking that works how our brains work. No sign up required.

    Connect your Thinking →

    source
  • hahattpro@lemmy.world ⁨4⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

    Image

    source
  • hahattpro@lemmy.world ⁨4⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

    What is PlantStudio?

    PlantStudio Botanical Illustration Software is a tool for creating 3D plant models and 2D illustrations. PlantStudio simulates herbaceous (non-woody) plants like wildflowers and cut flowers, vegetables, weeds, grasses, and herbs using a parameter-driven simulation of plant growth and structure. You can “grow” plants over their life cycles, producing lifelike images at any age. You can design, animate and breed a wide variety of plants. By using the “evolutionary arts” of variation and selection in the plant breeder, you can quickly and easily create whole families of unique plants for your 3D scenes.

    plants This just in… PlantStudio is now free! See our press release page for more information.

    How can I find out more? Check out PlantStudio’s features and requirements; look at the PlantStudio Gallery and Plant Exchange Area; take a look at some PlantStudio screen shots; read the reviews and user comments; and download the evaluation version! A copy of the help system on-line explains how the simulation works and which plants it draws best. phlox Great! How do I get it? You can download a fully-functional evaluation copy of PlantStudio now!

    violet What does it run on? PlantStudio requires Windows 95/98/NT/2000/Me.

    What’s in the future for PlantStudio? Feel free to weigh in on our PS3 wish list. And for a hint of PlantStudio’s past, here is a page about the history of PlantStudio.

    source
  • vhstape@lemmy.sdf.org ⁨8⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

    Awesome find! Thanks for sharing

    source