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@dailyshoot #ds339: "Double your art today. Make a photo of something you've created or crafted".
We had this assignment already, and I didn't want to do a similar one. So I stretched it with the beauty of nature (avocados) and the miracle how they even get more beautiful looking at them after years:
Many years ago a friend and I startet a project with avocados: we wanted to watch the process of their change over a longer time. Today I took them out of their board for the assignment and was surprised how the forty avocados present themselves now in different "status" (some of them: www.flickr.com/photos/rvoegtli/5099707319/).
Have you ever seen (on Flickr or elsewhere) those beautiful, towering grain silos? They're made of wood, often found on a sweeping plain, and are stories tall?
Well, they are the dinosaurs of the grain world, it seems. Prone to fire and rarely used any more. Pity.
They've been replaced with the "grain elevators" in this picture. We never had any such contraptions on our farm (we purchased our grain in burlap bags from the local farm store), and I don't recall ever really seeing any like this until the past few years.
(Aged with textures by Distressed Jewell because someday these silos, too, will probably become obsolete.)
Cassava starch processing near Hanoi, Vietnam.
Credit: ©2009CIAT/NeilPalmer
Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.
For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org
Im addicted! I love this project! I added some blending effects and am using a halo blurry image instead of a solid fill ellipse. I... had... no... idea...
I use Bamboo charcoal to create black color soap. Bamboo charcoal (not the charcoal that you grill over with) actually has incredible micro absorbent properties. It has been used in various applications in Japan, from water purification to air ionization. It draws out impurities from your pores, eliminates excess oils.
I haven't shot any cross processing or used my lomo since July 08. I was getting very fed up with it all. But i actually loaded a film into my lomo the other week, i haven't used it yet, but never say never.
Taking the last two kaleidoscopic pieces a little further. I wanted to make an expandable sheet of the kaleidoscope triangles which I can resize dynamically. These grabs were made with webcam input but after seeing the work of Movax, I tried pointed the camera at the monitor and was very impressed with the result. Thanks for the inspiration!
Informal wood processing at a wood depot near Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, in May 2013. Photo: Flore de Preneuf / World Bank
Photo ID: FP-DRC-4597
Continuação da tipografia criada com Processing. faltando pouco para acabar.
dpois irei postando o codigo fonte para cada letra do alfabeto.
=D
Para saber mais sobre processing:
Preparing some final assets for an upcoming talk I'm giving on my process / projects. bit.ly/pAmbyn
In case you were wondering how well Moleskine®s are bound… they are bound well.
My son bought an ebike kit that he is installing on his old Schwinn LeTour. It required a new fork with 10mm dropouts so the axle would fit.
Every day I check through my index cards several times. I do this at my desk only. My dock is stationary, so I can use things like the arrangement of the cards to have meanings without worrying about packing them up and losing the arrangement on the desk.
trivia: the gears are intentionally spaced just a bit farther apart than perfect mechanical contact would dictate - in practice, this would make for a very loose (and noisy) gear train, but graphically i felt it added some clarity amongst engaged teeth.
After finishing superdupershape implementation in surfaceLib, I wrote a small test program. After all there 15 parameters to create 3d shapes. Plus endless colors themes from kuler.
Wanted to see how well Processing would handle 3000 copies of overlapping pngs. I photoshopped out a set of 7 bird silhouettes and each flocking object grabs a random image from the set and rotates it according to its x/y angle. Voila, Hitchcock!
Next step is to use more controlled silhouettes and a larger variety. If I start to feel ambitious, I might model out the wings and body separately so I can recreate a rudimentary 3D simulation of a flying bird.
For FZ35/38 Photo Manipulation Challenge 4/1 - 4/14
www.flickr.com/groups/fz35-2/discuss/72157626406660538/
Original photo by Lukinosity
I have had some luck in the past with radial graphs, so I changed the code slightly to position the nodes around the centre, in clockwise chronological order. Here we see just 2 years of data. I really liked what started to happen here with the lines - this one has a kind of drunken-spirograph effect.
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These images document progress in my latest attempt to visualize data from the NYTimes API. These images are chronological, and show the evolution of this small project as it progressed over the course of a day.
This project was built in Processing, v. 1.0
You can find out more about these and other newspaper visualizations on my blog: blog.blprnt.com