You know what's next. Suika in kilometers.
Let's get to work!
We'll need someone with a field of crops, a combine harvester, and a whole load of patience.
I want to know the process of getting the results tho, how you do this?
Very straightforward. The scanning electron microscope I used for this was equipped with a focused ion beam emitter - basically a gun that shoots high-energy particles at what the microscope is looking at. These particles knock off matter from what they're hitting, essentially burning through stuff. The control software that comes with the SEM and its gun allows for all sorts of shapes to be drawn on the sample image, which the ion gun then follows - very useful for cutting into samples or just investigating deep into them. Early on in my training for this setup I found out that the control software accepts images.
All I needed to do from that point on was to open a Suika in MS Paint, make sure she's black and white, import the .jpg into the control program, and make sure that the ion current was low enough to ensure the image is of good quality. Meant it took a bit more time, but the lines are left crisp and clear.