Zoom into the Bloodstream from the human body transitioning into the heart, arteries, to blood cells, to the hemoglobin inside, to the oxygen molecules carried through out the body. Awarded First Place in the Illustration category of the 2008 National Science Foundation (NSF) and Science’s International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge.
Exporatorium:
Zoom into the Bloodstream poster Awarded First Place in the Illustration category of the 2008 National Science Foundation (NSF) and Science’s International Science and Engineering Visualization Challenge.
Exporatorium:
A forced perspective moves smoothly along/between the different scales, with the largest object in the distance (top) and the smallest objects atoms (bottom).
Exporatorium:
An arteriole is a tiny blood vessel red blood cells, platelets and cholesterol particles circulate.
Exporatorium:
The interior of a blood cell is filled with hemoglobin proteins. One hemoglobin protein holds four heme group subunits, each containing an iron atom. These iron atoms give blood its red color.
Honored in the Institutional Category, Communication Arts 51st Illustration Annual.
Museum exhibit "THEM"
Series done for a Discovery Center museum exhibit on microbes that cause disease.
Museum exhibit "THEM"
This panel focuses on the bacteria H. Pylori moving into the mucous layer on the epithelial cell lining damaging those cells.
Museum exhibit "THEM"
Detail of the cells and activity of the stomach including bacteria H. Pylori ...
Museum exhibit "THEM"
This panel focuses on the fungi that cause Athletes foot that grows in the moister of the sweat glands.
Museum exhibit "THEM"
An exhibit on microbes that cause disease. This panel focuses on the bacteria E. coli that abound in the large intestine. Normally they help digest food and destroy damaging microbes.
Museum exhibit "THEM"
This panel focuses on the bacteria that stick to teeth causing tooth decay, and are blocked by more harmful microbes.
The Minds' Eye
Award at the Association of Medical Illustrators (AMI) and cover of The Journal of Biocommunication