View allAll Photos Tagged Tesseract

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

Thank you for your visit :)

 

IPA 2016 Honorable Mention - Winner List

 

ND Award 2016 Honorable Mention - Winner List

 

Monochrome Award 2016 Honorable Mention - Winner List

 

Thank you for your visit :)

 

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© Zach Chang. All rights reserved.

Kindly contact me if you intend to use my works.

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

We're Here! reflecting on mirror mirror on the pic.

 

Mirrors can transport you to other dimensions. So can tesseracts. What about both? Can I find Meg here? I've been searching for her since 1962.

Grande Arche, La Défense, Paris, France

The Sobani Tesseract construction super capital on the move with a battleship escort.

 

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I forgot to post this pic of the Tesseract in low light. It shows the glow of the EL Wire that runs through the hull. Only the background and the engines have been edited. The light emitted by the El Wire is not tweaked in any way.

 

So what is EL Wire? It stands for Electro luminescent Wire, this wiki article explains it very well ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroluminescent_wire

EL Wire can be found on ebay for example and requires a high frequency sequencer that is usually sold in the same shops as those that sell the Wire. 3m of El wire and the sequencer required for this build cost something like 15euros. The sequencers require 2 AA or 2 AAA betteries.

 

There are various kinds of EL wire with different effects, frequencies and colors. They also come in various diameters. The 3.2mm diameter kind is very close to the size of a lego 'bar' so it can be clipped into a minifig hand for example without stress on the brick.

 

I hope this helps!

Blue Cube

Hanna Jubran

 

Installed at the north entrance to...

 

Avondale MARTA station

Decatur (Sycamore Ridge), Georgia, USA.

28 December 2019.

 

***************

▶ "Blue Cube is an abstract painted steel sculpture depicting cubes in motion. They represent our universe in a geometric form, balanced and orbiting each other. [...] The interplay of shape, forms, space, and colors changes as you move around the sculpture."

▶ One piece in the The Decatur Artway public arts project.

 

MARTA = Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority.

 

***************

▶ Photo by Yours For Good Fermentables.com.

▶ For a larger image, type 'L' (without the quotation marks).

— Follow on Twitter: @Cizauskas.

— Follow on Facebook: YoursForGoodFermentables.

— Follow on Instagram: @tcizauskas.

▶ Camera: Olympus OM-D E-M10 II.

---> Lens: Canon 100mm ƒ/2.8 FD

---> Focal length: 100 mm

---> Aperture: ƒ/11

---> Shutter speed: 1/320

---> ISO: 200

---> Edit: Photoshop Elements 15.

▶ Commercial use requires explicit permission, as per Creative Commons.

O'er Roslin all that dreary night

A wondrous blaze was seen to gleam;

'Twas broader than the watch-fire light,

And brighter than the bright moon-beam.

 

It glared on Roslin's castled rock,

It reddened all the copse-wood glen;

'Twas seen from Dryden's groves of oak,

And seen from caverned Hawthornden.

 

Sir Walter Scott, The Lay of the Last Minstrel, Canto VI, XXIII, Harold. Archibald Constable and Co., 12 January1805.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

  

Welcome to Rosslyn Chapel

www.rosslynchapel.com/

 

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

 

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

Beyond the 6 there is the Light and the Rock.

 

The Light gives us life, energy

The Rock gives us stability, certainty.

 

We are grateful for the knowledge bestowed upon us of the world beyond out plane.

(title edited with a little help from Psyko Spiff)

 

For Sliders Sunday

ROM entrance, Totonto

LEGO Marvel Superheroes

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,” this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

 

Tesseracts and other shapes within them selves revealing imagination and potential.

 

Maybe we can all agree to disagree that there was, “There was a crooked man,” or at least hold different notions of who the original is and how other visionaries have seen within the, “little crooked house.” One starting point could be, “—And He Built a Crooked House—,” by Robert A. Heinlein first published in, “Astounding Science Fiction,” in February 1941.

 

There again that work looks in on this one,

 

There was a crooked man and he went a crooked mile,

He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;

He bought a crooked cat, which caught a crooked mouse,

And they all liv'd together in a little crooked house.

 

James Orchard Halliwell set this in print in, “The Nursery Rhymes of England,” 1842 followed in 1849 with, “Popular Rhymes and Nursery Tales,”this was a sequel to, “The Nursery Rhymes of England.” Halliwell was banned from The British Museum suspected of taking documents from Trinity College, Cambridge, no prosecution ensued, but even his father in law a noted bibliophile refused to see him, or his daughter again. Halliwell literally created books within books and pages coming from and leading off to further illumination as he cut from old books and made scrapbooks of his cuttings. The destructive process of his book cutting and pasting was enough to close doors and have him excluded from rooms whilst he made new perspectives and gave food to fuel imagination opening doors that others could never follow him through.

 

I feel sure that there are those still enraged by his actions.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

The biggest ship ever built by the Sobani: the 'Tesseract' is a giant space shipyard capable of building or repairing even battleships sized vessels. It features a giant deployable 'drydock' that adapts to the type of ship that needs repairs / or that is planned for building on site.

 

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This is by far the biggest thing i ever built (105cm) , and also the most complex. It's not super clear in the pictures but this build integrates 3m of Electroluminescent Wire which lights up most of the ship's sides (mostly the factory and the hangar). The battery box is held within a compartment and can be accessed and removed easily. I'll write a little more about it later but EL Wire is a great thing to work with : it fits perfectly in a lego clip or minifig hand and doesnt heat up at all.

 

This project was built just like the most recent 2 for an exhibition at the biggest Toys R Us in Europe, in Paris (La défense) on the 3rd and 4th of november. Other builders are attending with fantastic creations : iomedes xtofcorthay and legodrome

  

Pics are somewhat mediocre at full resolution ... curse the wobbly tripod!

 

Picture has been replaced to remove the shadow the ship was casting on .... nothing!

O'er Roslin all that dreary night

A wondrous blaze was seen to gleam;

'Twas broader than the watch-fire light,

And brighter than the bright moon-beam.

 

It glared on Roslin's castled rock,

It reddened all the copse-wood glen;

'Twas seen from Dryden's groves of oak,

And seen from caverned Hawthornden.

 

Sir Walter Scott, The Lay of the Last Minstrel, Canto VI, XXIII, Harold. Archibald Constable and Co., 12 January1805.

 

© PHH Sykes 2023

phhsykes@gmail.com

  

Welcome to Rosslyn Chapel

www.rosslynchapel.com/

 

AKA The Cosmic Cube.

 

I built this for the display I did this past weekend at the second annual East Coast Comics Expo in Moncton NB.

 

It was on my list prior to the release of the Avengers movie, but I ran out of time. The show was just the kick I needed to cross some MOCs off my to do's

Harris Beach, Southern Oregon Coast.

In geometry, the tesseract is the four-dimensional analogue of the cube; the tesseract is to the cube as the cube is to the square. Just as the surface of the cube consists of six square faces, the hypersurface of the tesseract consists of eight cubical cells.

Give me just one moment.

Through the eyes of the one in,

A picture perfect moment.

In the life of the one who is,

Something better, more than,

Anything I will ever be.

Give me just one second,

Just to touch what I'll never own.

Let me count those feelings,

Of love that I will never share.

Show me your compassion,

In the dark of this world.

 

I would give it all.

For one taste of it.

- TesseracT

 

Perfection

 

My Website

Captain America and Ms. Marvel ambush Hydra's underground headquarters in pursuit of the mysterious Tesseract.

Can this heroic duo stop Red Skull before the portal to the other side of space is opened, or will a familiar face be coming home for the holidays?

With the Doctor's help (and that of Ian, Barbara and Susan) Odin is finally able to liberate the Tesseract from the Ice Giant/Ice Warrior alliance and return it to the security his Trophy Room...

 

... for now!

Theo van Doesburg - Tesseract (1924-1925)

La Grand Arche at La Defenase, Paris during blue hour. The arch is almost a perfect cube (width: 108m, height: 110m, depth: 112m); it has been suggested that the structure looks like a four-dimensional hypercube (a tesseract) projected onto the three-dimensional world. It has a prestressed concrete frame covered with glass and Carrara marble from Italy and was built by the French civil engineering company Bouygues.

 

Nikon D610, Nikkor 18-35g. Follow me on Twitter

evolving to tesseract

Inspired by Paul Ewing's excelllent experimentation with the cubic form, I have now expanded through another dimension with a hypercube. However, since we humans are currently limited in our ability to see multi-dimensionally, I have created this as an unfolded hypercube.

 

For further insight, Robert Heinlein has written a wonderful little story about this, And He Built a Crooked House. Note that the architect in Heinlein's story places the four protruding cubes at the second level rather than the third. I have chosen to use what's sometimes called the Dali Cross.

Tesseract - simplest device in our game: Archaica: The Path of Light

 

For details visit:

Steam page

Web page

I drew some tesseracts in my notebook during physics test preparation ...

Experimental tesseract setup creating red green and blue circles.

 

The cube got a bit warm, how strange ;)

 

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