View allAll Photos Tagged Openframeworks
I got OpenCV working with my particle painting program in open frameworks. Still a work in progress.
The installation had two sides. On one end by the entrance one could interact with the ribbon. Moving in front of it would cause the ribbon to open and reveal what was happening through the walls right onto the stage area. From the other side (pictured here) one could see and wave back at the people from the interactive side.
11 x 18" Signed, dated and titled.
More info: squareup.com/store/nick-hardeman/item/valera
"Valeria" was created using a custom squid generator application I wrote in OpenFrameworks. Each squid is randomly generated, and therefore unique. Hand water colored. Printed with a dark blue sakura micron pen on Canson 140 lb. acid free watercolor paper using the HP7475 pen plotter.
Assistant: Paloma Oliveira
Technological Development: Ricardo Palmieri
Tracking System: Roger Sodré
Images: Lucas Bambozzi and Lucas Gervilla
I got OpenCV working with my particle painting program in open frameworks. Still a work in progress.
working with metaballs, modifying the implicit surface function, exploring different rendering techniques and other parameters
porting some old ribbon code from processing to openFrameworks.
got a nice looking noise field using perlin noise and also added a new feature of colour mapping from an external jpg file
Parade is in Paris with Chromatic Festival for the Nuit Blanche at the Cité de la Mode et du Design.
To commemorate its 100th anniversary, IBM commissioned a unique public exhibition called THINK. The exhibition is an examination and a celebration of the human approach to understanding and improving the world through science and technology.
Upon entering the exhibition, visitors pass an LED wall showing live data feeds in vivid color. Once inside, visitors encounter a glowing forest of screens. A breathtaking film charts man’s patterns of progress and understanding. Sosolimited programmed the five interactives that appear on the screens at the end of the film. These interactives explore the history of our progress through Seeing, Mapping, Understanding, Believing, and Acting.
The interactives are visually striking and intuitive, providing visitors with an expansive collection of images, stories, and interviews. These multitouch software applications were designed to seamlessly display large collections of data at high frame rates. We developed the software with OpenFrameworks libraries.
The project was a collaboration between SYPartners, Ralph Applebaum & Associates, George P Johnson, Mirada, and Sosolimited.