
Visible Productions, Inc. is a Colorado corporation that was formed in January 1996. A multimedia communications company, Visible Productions has grown to employ 25 people. Our offices are located in Fort Collins, CO, New York, NY and Irvington, NY.
The company was founded to develop and distribute 3D digital models of all anatomical structures of the human body. These models were developed from a database of sectioned images created by the National Institutes of Health -- National Library of Medicine's "Visible Human" Project. To create the most highly detailed and accurate models ever achieved, Visible Productions developed proprietary software that traced, stacked and rendered all anatomical organs, organ systems, and regions from this data. It was the vision of the founders to create a business selling these unique, high quality polygonal models.
After multiple years in development, Visible Productions introduced its models to the market. Management soon recognized that the models provided a significant market advantage and opportunity for custom medical animations. Visible Productions has developed significant relationships with pharmaceutical and medical device companies for which it creates custom animations showing how a device works or a mechanism of action of a drug. VP also developed relationships with key institutions that assist in development of content that can best be shown visually through animation and multimedia.
The evolution of Visible Productions over the past two years has leveraged these relationships into a multimedia communications company, specializing in patient and physician education. In addition, it now develops complete health related programs and animation snippets that it owns and licenses.
The world's most extensive library of 3D digital models has been developed by Visible Productions based on data from the Visible Human Project sponsored by the National Library of Medicine.
Utilizing proprietary software developed by Visible Productions, we worked with the University of Colorado to produce the most intensive set of anatomical models of the human body currently available anywhere.
This powerful resource takes learners beyond the confines of a flat printed page into an interactive, three-dimensional environment where they can explore spatial relationships and events happening over time.