View allAll Photos Tagged Iteration

The next iteration of spring in my yard...the Azeleas are back. The Daffodils are gone, the Hyacynths are gone, Vinva and Periwinkle are departing...but the next shift is here.

 

Azaleas /əˈzeɪliə/ are flowering shrubs comprising two of the eight subgenera of the genus Rhododendron: the Tsutsuji (evergreen) and Pentanthera (deciduous). Azaleas bloom in summer, their flowers often lasting several weeks. Shade tolerant, they prefer living near or under trees.

  

Alex had a unique approach to the production of his design folio work. Alex was constantly drawing. He spent most of his classtime just drawing, even when he was supposed to be doing something else. He needed to draw to think. So what you see here isn't necessarily pretty but this folio is stuffed with ideas. Alex's approach demonstrates precisely and accurately the method of idea generation and refinement promoted by the department. Note the large number of drawings on eachpage. this allows the student to easily cross reference and tag from one idea to the next. Extensive annotation also helps to reveal design thinking and comments should always be relevant and refer back to the specification. It is clear that Alex has a thorough understanding of the more technical aspects of the course and he repeatedly suggests ways in which his concepts might be made.

 

Alex went on to do very well at Higher Product Design. Some of his work also features on this site. He's now studying maths at Warwick University.

This iteration now has proper content. I'd decided on an arts/music/culture type magazine/tumblr blog as the basis. This then meant I could start shaping the design around some real content.

 

I've used the brilliant Placehold.it (http://placehold.it/) service to create placeholders for images, and I'd also worked out how to make the cards different heights, depending on content

More empathy, more invention, more iteration.

Various iterations of the Roveround, a device developed by Bumpers College freshman Cara Conner. The device helps injured and aged animals regain their mobility. Cara and her brother, Grant, a senior in the Fulbright College, won the agricultural division of the 2018 Arkansas Governor's Cup Collegiate Business Plan Competition in April. Image courtesy Cara Conner.

The department has been building up a library of design related reference books over the last few years. Pupils are encouraged to make use of these books on a regular basis. The photographs here demonstrate the tremendous wealth of content contained therein.

 

The sequence has been shot in such a way that the cover of the book is shown first and a few sample pages are included to give the student an idea of the content the book contains. Pupils may then approach staff and request a short term loan.

S4 Craft & Design pupils are generating ideas. They have a lot of work to do before these ideas become finally resolved working concepts. Still some members of the class are off to a great start...

Lockheed Martin offered a 3D printing design challenge for the classic egg drop survival. The iterations go right to left. We started with a little too much beef and have quickly optimized the design for weight savings while still retaining great strength characteristics.

Here I zoomed in and used all three letters as connective structure.

 

Pros:

* Strongly resembles the classic look of a paper snowflake.

* Interestingly abstract and geometric.

* The P's are a little more successfully integrated.

* Another quicker one to make.

 

Cons:

* The EXP is hard to make out - you might not even notice it if you're not looking for it.

* The compact size made it too small to cut out the inside of the P.

* Its small.

*******************************************************************************

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

*******************************************************************************

 

Deformation of the Sierpinski tetrahedron.

The next iteration of my pirate cosplay. This time I played with scar make up. The pirate cosplay is one of my favorite's to do because she's an OC and I get to wear all of my favorite things at once.

 

Among other things this iteration features my hand-made chainmaille, necklaces from Hawaii, jewelry from both of my grandmothers, my Once Upon a Time book necklace and the perfect hat I got from Dragon Wings at the Maryland RenFest!

S4 Craft & Design pupils are generating ideas. They have a lot of work to do before these ideas become finally resolved working concepts. Still some members of the class are off to a great start...

The next iteration of the Kaiser Permanente Center for Total Health in Washington, DC will bring our members and patients to life in 3 dimensional form, so that their stories can be told better. Follow the #CTHNext hashtag or the @KPTotalHealth handle to follow our progress

 

twitter.com/hashtag/cthnext?f=realtime&src=hash

twitter.com/kptotalhealth

www.kp.org/centerfortotalhealth

Discovery! - Iteration II (2017) acrylic and charcoal on paper 1730x915mm

 

In collaboration with Tony DeVarco

Tony Devarco www.flickr.com/photos/tonydevarco/

CoLab with Mayako Nakamura

www.flickr.com/photos/tonydevarco/sets/72157649519692395/...

ReGenerations

www.flickr.com/photos/tonydevarco/albums/72157666448906835

 

☆Sold☆

01CT -- 'Chain' reaction, prefers the coarse chain to the small and smooth one - you need something that has some resistance

 

First Iteration of Haptic Point f Entry to Peer Support Self Advocacy System

Fractal type:julia

Plot size (w,h):2210,2210

Maximum iterations:26000

Center Point (real, imaginary):-1.584e-05,4.753e-05 i

Plot Width (real):0.07

Julia origin (real, imaginary):0.2511818326505962,-6.483398567824383E-05 i

Source mandelbrot width:3E-11

 

Color scheme name:Hair

Fractalworks plot Jun17wja1b

Document name:Oct29wma1d.FWrk

Fractal type:mandelbrot

Plot size (w,h):2210,2210

Maximum iterations:31000

Center Point (real, imaginary):-0.107882166159218,-0.838327995314665 i

Plot Width (real):3E-13

 

Color scheme name:FallColored2

Color scheme last modified:2008-10-29 11:04:49 -0700

Plot uses DE:Yes

Plot uses fractaional iterations:Yes

Plotted with symmetry:Yes

Plotted with boundary following:Yes

Plotted with multiple processors:Yes

Total plot time:0.000 seconds

Total iterations:20022783434

Iterations/second:2147483647

Pixels skipped:0

Iterations skipped:0

Percent of pixels calculated:99.9

Percent of iterations calculated:100

 

Plot height:0.1

Peak steepness:0.2

Plot flipped:Yes

Camera x:0.000448

Camera y:-0.172

Camera z:-0.873

Ambient light:0.5

Directional light:0.6

Specular light:0.1

Surface shininess: 10

Light x direction:-1

Light Y direction:1

Light z direction:1

Background color red:204

Background color green:204

Background color blue:204

 

Fractalworks plot Oct29wma1d

 

Fractalworks plot Untitled

Iterative prototyping for the wearable light logger for Light Catchers www.michaelang.com/project/lightcatchers

The Sunday Pizza Making Factory: three Pizza Fiorentinas.

 

This was to celebrate the purchase of new pizza stone, new rolling pin, and discovery of Italian Tipo-00 flour. My hands will smell of garlic for the next three days.

 

Driven to pizza obsession by the all-round brilliant Zana.

 

Recipe:

 

Required: Tipo-00 or plain white flour, olive oil, salt, yeast, sugar, spinach leaves, oregano, mozzarella, eggs, 400g or more tomatoes, onion, garlic.

 

1. Mix 50ml lukewarm water with a sachet (2tsp) yeast and half a teaspoon of sugar in a cup, stir, and leave for 10 mins.

 

2. Measure 500g flour, add 4tbs good oil, a few pinches of sea salt

 

3. Mix all above with 200ml lukewarm water then knead into smooth dough. Place dough in a bowl, cover with tea towel and leave in warmish place for an hour or so.

 

4. Meanwhile, prepare tomato topping: finely chopped onion and garlic, fried in a pan with butter and a bit of oil, then chop and add tomatoes and squeeze in a big old squeeze of tomato paste. Add salt, leave to simmer for a while until it looks nice.

 

5. Cube a load of mozzarella (smallish cubes) and finely chop some more garlic. Put your pizza stone in the oven (£9 from Amazon including postage - it makes a world of difference cooking on a stone.)

 

6. When the dough is ready, split into three, knead the first piece again quickly then roll out with a rolling pin. Pinch up the sides for a crust.

 

7. Bring pizza stone out of oven, lay the dough base on it, then spread a third of the tomato topping over thinly, making sure you get all the way right up to the edges to avoid burning crusts. Add mozzarella cubes then a good amount of fresh spinach. Layer the spinach up a little bit, maybe two layers.

 

8. Oven, full heat. Keep checking. After 5 or 10 mins it should look not quite cooked. Not quite browning yet. At this point, take it out, crack an egg in the middle, put it back in again.

 

9. Keep checking the egg. Around 5 more minutes, or until the egg is just cooked.

 

10. Sprinkle on the parmigiana, a drizzle or two of olive oil, enjoy.

Since 1993, the energy efficiency elite have gather to honor the "best of the best" at the Alliance to Save Energy's Evening With the Stars of Energy Efficiency Awards Dinner.

 

On September 22, 2016 nearly 400 leaders from industry, government and the non-profit sectors convened as we celebrated the 24th iteration of the event at the Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium in Washington, D.C.

  

Learn more on ase.org/dinner

 

Photos by Erin Scott.

The Daily Shoot #ds205 - Iteration or repetition of a subject makes for good composition. Look for a repeating pattern today and make a photo.

 

I like the repeating grain as well as the less regular repeating cuts in the board. I didn't really leave my house today, so this is what I could find :)

Iteration 3 - This is being worked on at a size of 2500 pixels wide. If I need to be able to add tinier detail, I'll size it even larger.

It is reduced for display here.

Iterative prototyping for the wearable light logger for Light Catchers www.michaelang.com/project/lightcatchers

The good old Inspiron 5150 and the heat sink that couldn't.

iMAL, Brussels, June, 2016

A collective installation by Constant & esc

"I don’t know where this is going" is the second part of Iterations, a project investigating the future of collaborative artistic practices in a technologically networked context. The exhibition presents a collective installation by Pascale Barret (BE/FR), Miriam Raggam (AT), Claire Williams (BE/FR), François Zajega (BE), Julien Deswaef (USA/BE) and Annie Abrahams (NL/FR).

imal.org/en/iterations2

1 2 ••• 36 37 39 41 42 ••• 79 80