Bringing Blender to Scientists Everywhere

Bring your science to life in 3D

Visualize Your Science in 3D

Science communication is an essential part of great research. By providing free educational content and 3D assets for scientists and engineers I aim to make better figures accessible to everyone

 

Featured Scientific Assets

Spend more time on the message and less on the models

 
 

Glassware Bundle

Cell Builder

Graphene

 

Featured Tutorials

Bring your science to life with subject specialized tutorials

 

Make any Molecule in Blender

Getting Started with Geometry Nodes

The Complete Introduction for Beginners

 

Community Features

 

Tom Ovenden

2D Animation, Ecology, Photography and so much more. Tom Ovenden combines teaching with a passion for scientific communication that set his work apart

Professor Helen Tran

Prof. Tran was the original inspiration for CGFigures. Her work was one of the best examples I had ever seen of effective scientific communication

Biocinematics

Stuart Jantzen’s Biocinematics and Making Biocinematic projects are a fantastic tool for anyone who wants to see what 3D can do for their science

 

Commentary and Walkthroughs

 

RSS Feeds

Scientific illustration doesn’t have to be a mystery. Even if you don’t have access to the articles you can use RSS Feeds to see first hand what kind of figures are published in your field of interest

Figure Recreation 1

A huge part of how I learned to make figures was by replicating published work. Full walkthroughs will be a more common feature of the channel moving forward

Blender & Science

The walkthrough and discussion series where I recreate figures and covers, work through example problems and discuss research, scientific communication, and developments in the Blender community