List of common 3D test models

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This is a list of models and meshes commonly used in 3D computer graphics for testing and demonstrating rendering algorithms and visual effects. Their use is important for comparing results, similar to the way standard test images are used in image processing.

Modeled

Designed using CAD software; sorted by year of modeling.

More information Name and viewer, Render ...
Name and viewer Render Year of creation Person/organisation that did the modeling Description of source object Model size License Comments
Utah teapot
1975 Martin Newell at University of Utah Melitta teapot 28 Bézier patches (32 with the bottom)[1] Also called the "Newell teapot". One of the first models not to be measured.
Cornell box
1984 Cindy M. Goral, Kenneth E. Torrance, Donald P. Greenberg, Bennett Battaile at Cornell University A 2 foot square box, open on one side, two opposing interior sides each painted a contrasting color, with the rest of the box painted light gray 5 quads

1 light source

Use as a 3D test model commonly relies on familiarity with the expected results rather than rerunning the experiment against a real-life setup.
Suzanne
2002 Willem-Paul van Overbruggen for Blender Chimpanzee head, based on an orangutan from the movie Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back 500 faces GNU GPL 2+ (inherited from Blender as a whole) Mascot for Blender[2]
Crytek Sponza
2010 Frank Meinl at Crytek The colonnaded atrium of the Sponza Palace in Dubrovnik[3] 184,330 vertices

262,267 triangles[3]

Used for demonstrating global illumination techniques.[4][5][6][7] The Crytek version is based on a model created by Marko Dabrović in early 2001 while he was at RNA studio, and donated to a radiosity competition held by CGTechniques.com in early 2002.[8][9][10]
Spot
2012 Keenan Crane at Caltech Cartoon cow 2,930 vertices
5,856 triangles
CC0[11] Catmull-Clark control mesh, quadrangulation, triangulation, vector texture, and bitmap texture. All meshes are manifold, genus-0 embeddings.
3DBenchy
2015 Creative Tools Cartoon toy boat 112,569 vertices

225,154 triangles

CC0[12] Specifically designed for testing the accuracy and capabilities of 3D printers
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Scanned

Includes photogrammetric methods; sorted by year of scanning.

More information Name and viewer, Render ...
Name and viewer Render Year of creation Person/organisation responsible for the scan Description of source object Model size License Comments
Stanford bunny
1993-94[13] Greg Turk, Marc Levoy at Stanford University Ceramic rabbit[14] 69,451 triangles[13] Figurine of unknown authorship and licensing status, scan itself released under a two-clause BSD license. A test of range scanning physical objects. Originally .ply file.
Stanford dragon
1996[13] Stanford University Chinese dragon 1,132,830 triangles
Stanford Armadillo
3D model of an armadillo action figure
1996[13] Venkat Krishnamurthy and Marc Levoy at Stanford University Armadillo action figure 345,944 triangles Free for scholarly writings and research, attribution required, no commercial use without prior permission[13]
Wooden Elk Toy
2000[15] Hans-Peter Seidel at Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik Often used as an example of a non-trivial object with high genus.
Phlegmatic Dragon[16]
Render of Phlegmatic Dragon model
Phlegmatic Dragon
2007 Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Czech Technical University in PragueEurographics 2007 conference 667,214 faces (original)
480,076 faces (smoothed)
Sticker on the bottom says "GRUNCH © PANTON '88 MADE IN ENGLAND" Smoothed and nonsmoothed
David[17][18] 2009 Stanford University Michelangelo's 5-meter statue David[17] ~1 billion polygons[19] Only available to established scholars and for non-commercial use only.[18] range data[18]
Fertility
2009 AIM@SHAPE Repository (scanned at Utrecht University) Small stone statue with two joined figures. 241,607 vertices
483,226 triangles
Laser scan.
Nefertiti 2015 Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles A stoneworked bust of the Egyptian queen Nefertiti created in 1345 BC by Thutmose ~2 million triangles CC By SA 4.0 Surreptitiously scanned by Nora Al-Badri and Jan Nikolai Nelles, and subsequently separately by Scan the World with permission of the Neues Museum.
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See also

References

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