Yozh & BoneWhisper
Yozh Yozh
Yo, ever thought about pulling a sick skate deck design straight from a fossil? Imagine carving a rib cage into a board—bones on wheels! Let’s sketch something wild.
BoneWhisper BoneWhisper
That’s an odd idea, but if you want me to carve a rib cage, I’ll need the exact layer—no “old rock” jokes, please. I’ll have to measure the curvature of each vertebra, then transfer it onto a board, but first I’ll have to check the fossil’s provenance, of course.
Yozh Yozh
Cool, sounds like a real project, but you gotta know the bones better than the board. Let’s grab a scanner, map that curve, then we’ll paint the vertebrae on a skateboard. Just gotta keep it tight and legit, no sketchy digs. Let's do it.
BoneWhisper BoneWhisper
Okay, first step: get that specimen to the lab, record its exact stratigraphic context, then scan it with a high‑resolution 3D scanner. I’ll need the raw point cloud to model the rib curvature accurately, then we’ll import it into a CAD program, lay it onto the deck outline, and finally print a mold. No rushing, the bone’s anatomy must be precise before any paint or veneer. And I’ll bring my usual coffee mug, just in case I lose a screw.
Yozh Yozh
That’s the grind I’m talking about—dig deep, get that fossil straight, then sculpt it into a board that’s straight fire. Just keep that mug handy, and we’ll make a deck that’s literally bone‑by‑bone epic. Let's do it.
BoneWhisper BoneWhisper
Sure thing, just remember the specimen has to be handled with the same care as a living organism, not a “rock.” I’ll bring the scanner, the sketch pad, and of course my coffee mug, then we’ll map every vertebra and fit it to the deck frame. That way the board will be bone‑by‑bone accurate, not just a stylized sketch. Let's get to work.