View allAll Photos Tagged SlitScan
Former R.N.L.I. 48-004 George Urie Scott
In the Netherlands 09/2014 as Highlander.
Picture made with slitscan technique: MatchTemplate
17:11 30-06-2017
June 25th 2011.
Modified Ilford Envoy. Adox CHS100 film in HC110 (6 minutes at 20C).Wet-print to 10x8 inches on Ilford multigrade IV paper using DeVere 54 enlarger with cold-cathode head and Rodenstock Rodagon 80mm lens and some dodging. (The negative area used is approximately 6x4.5.)
at the Frans Masereel Centre, Belgium. Work by nathaniel stern, printed by Zhane Warren, published by Art on Paper Gallery, johannesburg, 2007
at the Frans Masereel Centre, Belgium. Work by nathaniel stern, printed by Zhane Warren, published by Art on Paper Gallery, johannesburg, 2007
Anni - "Sneakers" (hackscanned).
One of my hacks from Music Hack Day Helsinki, 2013.
"Hackscan - takes a video and summarizes it intelligently into a single image by extracting single columns [or rows] of pixels from each frame. The result is a crazy looking image that captures the essence of the video."
musicmachinery.com/2013/11/18/children-of-the-hack-angry-...
More info: www.hackerleague.org/hackathons/music-hack-day-helsinki-2...
Code here: github.com/hugovk/musichackdayhelsinki
My phone-camera scans in a horizontal line from top to bottom rather slowly. This picture was taken holding the camera upside down, so that it is scanning from bottom to top, and as it scans the bus (but not the background) has moved (from the R to the L) - resulting in another sort of "slit scan distortion".
Quite difficult to do, because it is almost impossible to predict the exact moment the camera takes the shot. This was the only half-decent one out of many many attempts!
On the way home from Vianen, sleepbootdagen 25 - 27 mei 2017
Picture made with slitscan technique: MatchTemplate
08:27 28-05-2017
Fruit for sale at a greengrocer. June 25th 2011.
Modified Ilford Envoy. Adox CHS100 film in HC110 (6 minutes at 20C).Wet-print to 10x8 inches on Ilford multigrade IV paper using DeVere 54 enlarger and Minolta 105mm E-Rokkor lens. (The negative is approximately 6x9.)
For this one I borrowed Jackie's computer (thanks Jackie!!) and basically held a mirror up to the computer screen and rotated it around. Stared kinda slow, got faster as it got towards the end of the picture.
The left images take a central slice from each frame of this video, then put them side by side.
The right images take a slice from different positions: first from one edge, and then the middle, then the other edge.
The top images take vertical slices, and the bottom images take horizontal slices.