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Draw viewing party for the FIFA Women's World Cup Canada 2015
6 December 2014 - Ottawa, ON, Canada
Canada Soccer / John Major
Gloucester Hornets
On Saturday, Oct. 2, 2010, Huntington visitors took part in a unique communal art project that celebrated the act of drawing. Nature provided the drafting materials for this wonderfully organic work of art. For details and more photos, see our Big Draw set.
The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Garden.
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I decided some bands of rotating colour might do nicely for a poster background, open GIMP to do it, and discovered it wouldn't.
So I did it in RISC OS instead, using !Draw's Grade feature to interpolate lines of alternating rotated colour. Because !Draw can do more than this, I made the lines gently wavy to begin with. (Converted to a BMP bit map with !DrawToSpr.)
This gave me a circular do-dah with a fault in the middle (because you can't layer a sequence of lines so none are on top like impossible stairs). To get the size of the maximum inscribed circle, I rounded down the reciprocal root 2 of the radius, and took that as a centered canvas size reduction in PSP.
I got rid of the layers flaw with a second layer taken as a copy of the centre of the image, rotated 180° with it's flaw cut out, and recentred. Minimised the flaw first in MsPaint, temporarily replacing the centre colour with a contrasting one to make things stand out.
As I was repositioning the correction layer, using a difference filter, I noticed interesting interference patterns. So tried that again with multiply and a duplicate of the whole layer, and got much like what you see above. It just took clipping out the intersected area and a bit more resizing/clipping to get it as a standard screensize.
Each rotor consists of the same bézier curve, rotated so 16 complete a circle, and in alternate colours. 16 graduations between each of them were all that were necessary, and the lines are thick enough to overlap. This means that each of the two rotors consist of nothing more fancy than 256 wiggly lines.
This is my first really-cool looking wallpaper, and I expect to get paid a lot of money after sending it in the Lifehacker, dropped off in the foyer in a black refuse sack marked "thistles". Hang on a minute someone, just said they've disposed of the "toxic waste"...
Generated Friday 20th May 2011AD, 1538BST.
PNCA presents The Big Draw. October 25, 2014. The Big Draw includes activities for ages 4-99 including drawing with pencils and pastels, with vegetable colors and threads and drawing as observation and as performance. As the event unfolds, our individual and collaborative drawings will intersect our Campus Commons in myriad lines and shapes. Come and reframe the expectations of drawing with your mark-making at The Big Draw.
The 2014 Big Draw will run from October 1st to November 2nd across the UK and in twenty other countries, with 280,000 people expected to join in over 1000+ events. The Big Draw offers thousands of enjoyable drawing activities, which connect people of all ages with museums, outdoor spaces, artists, designers, illustrators - and each other. These events are for those who love to draw, as well as for those who think they can’t!
At PNCA, in addition to traditional drawing materials, join us for non-traditional mark-making including 3D drawing, Giant Crayons drawing, needle & thread images, drawings that move, and our event’s centerpiece, the Big World Drawing. There will also be a Zine Factory hosted by Sarah Wolf Newlands’ Freshman Inquiry classes, “Work of Art,” from Portland State University.
Photographs by Matthew Gaston.
Artist: Jonathan Andersson
Title: DRAW
Material:
Open Day at The Art Factory
Old Bally Shoe Factory
Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK
Not only does the mobile game Draw Something display banner ads during gameplay, it displays full screen popups between turns.
We got stopped right at the draw of the Lindsey C. Warren Bridge (Alligator River) for three boats to go through on a brisk November morning between Tyrrell county and Dare county in North Carolina. This is a 2.8-mile long bridge, one of the longest in NC, was built in 1960 and is named in honor of Warren Carter Lindsey (12/16/1889 to 12/28/1976) who was a Democratic U.S. Congressman from North Carolina between 1925 and 1940. Bridges of this type are gradually being replaced in eastern NC.