What is Lidar scanning?
LiDAR stands for Light Detection and Ranging.
- 
It works by shooting out tiny pulses of infrared light (lasers). 
- 
Each pulse bounces back when it hits a surface. 
- 
The device measures the time it takes to return → this gives the distance to that surface. 
- 
Millions of these measurements build up a point cloud = a digital 3D map of the environment or object. 
LiDAR captures the shape of real objects in 3D, with depth and scale, not just flat photos.
Artists use LiDAR scanning to:
- 
Capture sculptures, costumes, installations, or landscapes as precise 3D models. 
- 
Create digital doubles of their work for archiving or documentation. 
- 
Remix physical works in VR/AR, projection mapping, or dataflow software like TouchDesigner. 
- 
Use scans as a starting point for fabrication (3D printing, CNC, etc.). 
It’s not about photorealistic color but about geometry—a solid spatial “skeleton” you can texture, render, or transform artistically.
