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Professor Jose Faria and students in the Construction Process Lab of FIU's OHL School of Construction.
Process 4.5 is the first in a series of special edition Process publications. Printed in only black on lighweight 70gsm Bond, Process 4.5 purposely contrasts the usual high production qualities of the quarterly journal, as well acting as a platoform to experiment with different formats and production techniques. The publication's content is a reflection and retrospective of the first four editions of Process Journal. Consisting of three major parts, the first a comprehensive essay written by typographer and design-lecturer Brad Haylock. The second a typographic analysis of each of the typefaces featured in editions one to four, including type samples and specimens. And finally, we asked a selection of contributors from editions one to four the simple question: ‘what is your process’. Including responses from Brett Phillips (3 Deep Design), Michael C. Place (Build), Mason Wells (Bibliothèque), Tom Crabtree (Manual) and Tony Brook (Spin).
This print is for a doll quilt swap I am in (i hope she likes pink!). It was made using the contact paper method of screen printing(there are 3 layers) on top of a vintage print my aunt gave me and uses fabric ink to make sure that is is washable.
Little recoding. Trying to figure out why the particles got so spastic when near the shell of the central orb in older builds. Think I fixed it and to show the stability, threw a couple hundred particles into the space to see what architectural forms they would create.
A globe constructed with peace symbols - 6810 of them. Created with custom software built with Processing.
05_06 - Installing Decking Process – And there we have a finished, spacer-width miter for funky angles. I don’t even know what most of the angles are that I had to cut miters on, all I know is: I never used a 45-degree cut!
Headwaters Energy's Covol Fuels 3 Crockett Coal Processing in Crockett, KY was quiet when I visited the area.
Set from another engine built with processing from processing.org. This engine essencially rotates some geometry in 3D space while painting with particles at it's vertices.
Part of our Flickr group weekly challenge. To process and/or manipulate a picture supplied by the previous winner in the group.
Original picture is Here:
www.flickr.com/photos/24506073@N06/5156608487/
Decided to do a slightly different crop, Mainly cause those lights are so cool.
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Using Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen's photo 'return the cart' as the source [ www.flickr.com/photos/peterras/15732813631 ] & a bit of Processing code to swaps blocks of pixels inside the image continually . . . the little app creates decay in the image. I'm continuing a series of works meditating on forgetting, recognition, loss, avoidance, etc.
I did not know.
I did not know, that when a drummer's drum pedal is pressed that the position of where the mallet head strikes the drum head- can affect the sound.
Apparently- if the mallet strikes precisely at the drum heads center- the sound is optimal-
richer and "bass-ier" than striking off center, where the factory pedal causes the mallet to engage the drumhead.
So- what to do?
Either, lower the Pedal, or raise the Drum head higher.
Sounds Simple- right?
Simple, as we've discussed earlier kids- ain't always so simple.....