A sharp crash of violent gusts lay siege to the tall, contempt-filled tree outside this great guarding glass, endlessly beating against the long-lived giant that towers above its small, watchful children below. Cold torrents of liquid grief, unendingly toiling the ravaged soil, make for the crudest fertilizers. It hangs low, its upper portion, the base sunken into the watery loam that permeates the grassy quagmire surrounding some thirsty roots, swelling with gratitude for the great generosity of these gray-blotched granters of the means to live in a world where poisoned water is ignored and consumed.
It makes the grass sing in bountiful notes of splendor, rejoicing that the gray clouds, donating their color to somewhere else, opened within the jeweled sky as a gleaming white herald that gave a glittering pile of sunlight, dripping, to the opened, breathing leaves of the tree that bows.
Mother Nature is magnificent. Just admire the terrifying beauty of this thunderstorm off the Coast of Maroochydore which happened on the first of February.
By BlueDogFilms
Full Video
Project by Paul Hollingworth explores shape and contour using a lightstrip - these are not 3D renders but a series of photographic captures:
Artificial Anatomy is an ongoing personal project intended to explore our understanding and perception of surface, texture and volume. Part 2 uses flashing electroluminescent wire to illuminate sections of a human head and skull. The resulting imagery depicts partially defined forms composed of linear shapes of varying complexity.
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Jonathan Burkhart
Doodling with pen. You can see the entire moleskine on march at Thinkspace Gallery
Coastal Views
www.spudgroshong.com
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by Dino Olivieri
by Guillem March
Truly impressive technology from Ishikawa Watanabe Laboratory, University of Tokyo, can accurately projection map on moving, loose, dynamic surfaces:
We realize dynamic projection mapping onto deforming non-rigid surface based on two original technologies. The first technology is a high-speed projector “DynaFlash” that can project 8-bit images up to 1,000 fps with 3 ms delay. The second technology is a high-speed non-rigid surface tracking at 1,000 fps. Since the projection and sensing are operated at a speed of 1,000 fps, a human cannot perceive any misalignment between the dynamically-deforming target and the projected images. Especially, focusing on new paradigms in the field of user interface and fashion, we have demonstrated dynamic projection mapping onto a deformed sheet of paper and T-shirt. Also we show that projection to multiple targets can be controlled flexibly by using our recognition technique.
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Thunderstorm
full-time bio student, part-time sassyboy tbh. emojis are r i d i c. ☝✌✌✌☝
198 posts