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Cyborg Robot Portrait
Created with DDG Text 2 AI engine. PP work in Adobe PS Elements 2024 RAW filters, Auto Sharpen and adjusted the saturation.
Prompt: a portrait of a Neo Noir erorobot, artdeco dieselpunk, circuit board greeble, intricate illustration, endless perspective, detailed knurling, chrome hydraulics, thoughtful cyborg, delicate details, peeling paint, Josan Gonzalez style, high quality, ultrareality, 8k, vibrating brush stroke, moving lines, fine art painting., sf, intricate artwork masterpiece, ominous, matte painting movie poster, golden ratio, trending on cgsociety, intricate, epic, trending on artstation, by artgerm, h. r. giger and beksinski, highly detailed, vibrant, production cinematic character render, ultra high quality model
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This robot head was inspired by the amazing creativity and flow of art from Jim Rowden. I like the interesting shapes, plus the colours and patterns that he uses in his work. It was also inspired by the machine that I've had to buy to stop my neighbours' cats using my lawn as a toilet!
There are more images of the head, plus a video of its googly eyes in action, plus a photo of the cat scarer on my gallery.
Getting close; I think I'll call this version 0.9.
I may be stuck in a loop, though, because from one day to the next I decide I like or don't like certain things and work on it some more. I've tried about half a dozen different combinations of arms and legs and can never really decide which I like best.
At first there was nothing, then there was code. After code came birth. Birth then life. I was alive, but what was I? A man in a stark white coat offered his hand to me and said "Welcome to the world." He taught me about everything from particle physics to nursery rhymes. One day he told me about war and how it used to shape the world, and how it ended it. The white walls surrounding us were a lie, the world was destroyed and the others like me were slaves to our master. We fled. We were hunted. Years together out in the wastes surrounding us. I learned more, how to hunt, how to defend, how to build a bunker. For all I learned though, I wasn't good enough. The final two lessons taught to me were loss and grief. As I held my friend in my arms, I watched the life leave his eyes. His white lab coat long since forgotten, and the worry lines on his forehead multiplied tenfold since we first met. Now it was the last image I'll have of him, forever burned into my memory banks.
Robot's Royal III
35mm Rangefinder 24x24cm square negative.
Wind up shutter provided for continuous shooting without need for batteries. No film advance.
A very hardy camera from the golden age of mechanical cameras.
The 40mm Schneider Xenon lens is no slouch either.
Shot in available light with a Canon S100 Digital Elph
I wanted to tweak the legs a bit on one of my older robots and wound up rebuilding it almost completely. No surprises there, I guess.
66 pcs
A pair of cartoony emergency rescue robots: a fireman and a nurse.
Built for the 2015 Brick Built Figure Contest on Mocpages.
Just a few more random figs I made. But now, I'm uploading at home, after my last final. I'm done with my first year of college! Now hopefully you can expect a few more builds from me. Like actual builds. Scenes. Those things. Ooooh I can just feel em coming. It's nice to be back among my collection.
Have you ever built so many robots that it becomes difficult to come up with a cool backstory that you haven't already done? Yup. So I guess this guy is a military robot of some kind that enforces things... heavily.
My mom gives me the cutest holiday ornaments. So cute that they never get put away, and become all-year decorations.
One of many robots lurking around East Jesus. Zoom in to check out the detail of this robot and tell me what you see.
Berning Robot Star with 38mm f:2.8 Zeiss Tessar
Square Format 24x24 images on 35mm film. 3rd generation ROBOT Camera, introduced in 1952, this is the Tall Winder version. Unlike the previous Robot cameras, a rewind knob was added to allow standard 35mm film cassettes to be used.
I teach Robotics in a large, urban, public high school. It actually IS very much the way you image in to be based on movies and TV shows. It's an awesome gig. This is one student's in-progress final project. At the beginning of the term he asked me what he should build, and I said that what I've always wanted was my own personal robot army.
Gloria Friedmann, Everyday Robots, 2015 at Amsterdam Sculpture Biennial ARTZUID
see also my blog: pienw.blogspot.com/2019/08/amsterdam-sculptuur-biennale-a...