View allAll Photos Tagged Visualisation
Cover of the wonderful book by Neville Goddard, who explains how power of our thoughts and imagination to create our reality.
An early renderhouse visualisation project, very fine people, Staf Claessen and his wife. They invited me to take a look at the 'work in progress'. You can easily compare the renders and the final result
This simple data visualisation shows programme sales mapped against audience size coloured coded by genre.
It was produced using Google Tables from a csv file.
From a brilliant tutorial by Ducky£D.
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Some other albums of mine I hope you'll enjoy:
2023
Twitter ID: erraticspace
Instagram (opens in same page!)
Instagram: My cat + friends
Instagram: Me - Non-cat stuff.
Visualisation of a steel-case bungaloo studie for a camping site in Brandenburg BRD.
Client: PGF-ARCHITEKTUR.CH
p.art@gmx.ch
Tottenham Court Road in London 1910.
In 1910 a travel guide used Birds-Eye Views to illustrate the areas.
Eindhoven, Nederland, jan2009
Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, TU/e
cmos 1.6x, iso 800, 18mm f5.6 1/125s
A dipolar vortex. The flow is visualised with TiO-flakes (the 'stardust') illuminated by a thin light sheet. Thanks for the shot, R.
From Isotype Revisited project (http://www.isotyperevisited.org) at the University of Reading. Reproduced with permission.
Visualisation with view from Hamlets Way - new proposed entrance to Ennerdale House, with EastendHomes office wrapping round the block.
Our rendered landscape visualisation for this residential development in Totteridge, London. More information on Totteridge Lane on our website.
After constructing a happier world around them, Joshua asked participants to choose one action they would take to help create that world.
An early renderhouse visualisation project, very fine people, Staf Claessen and his wife. They invited me to take a look at the 'work in progress'. You can easily compare the renders and the final result
The data visualisation I chose was the songs on my Spotify playlist. I wanted to express the data in a manner that reflects the data itself thus, I utilised a music sheet.
For the data, one song is represented by one music note and it coded by its own respective genre through colour and type of the music note. The data is read like how a music sheet is - the first note represents the first song added onto my Spotify playlist. Hence, they are placed according to what time they were added to my playlist. There are certain gaps where I did not add any songs which is most prominent with the full rest symbol on the last bar. This was when I returned to my home country and did not use Spotify. Other gaps, are because of holidays or when I had examinations. It also shows when the songs were produced by the vertical axis. There were times (as shown on the data) where I listened to a lot of older music and reminisced.
All in all, this project allowed me to actually visualise the genre of music I enjoy listening to and the specific periods I do.