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Sake cups
Material: Southern Ice porcelain mixed with oxides by Peter Biddulph www.ceramicdesign.org
This is the video compilation from each epoch of the GAN (General Adversarial Network). This is the AI that made the image of the above-titled work. Run on GPU and Google Colab.
I was channeling my inner "shaman" to see what it would do if I gave in prompts like "mushroom forest." This used the VQGAN library and different PyTorch optimizers.
This surface is simply brushed silver with an Arabic art calligraphic carved on it. Teapots like this are actually very popular in Egypt and sold in a place called Khan-ElKhalily. In case you visit Egypt then remember to buy one of these :)
To achieve this surface I used the following:
1- Bump mapping to map the normal according to the calligraphic to be carved on the surface.
2- Turbulence to slightly perturb the normal hence giving the illusion that the silver is brushed.
3- Reflection shading to give the illusion of the silver being reflective.
This is the video compilation from each epoch of the GAN (General Adversarial Network). This is the AI that made the image of the above-titled work. Run on GPU and Google Colab.
I was channeling my inner "shaman" to see what it would do if I gave in prompts like "snake spirit." This used the VQGAN library.
I designed this scene, the first complete scene I have done in computer animation, in 2005 or 2006. All modeling was done from scratch in Animation Master 2005 on a 1ghz iBook G4. Since all I ever did was a test render I recently loaded the software onto my newer 1.33ghz 17" PowerBook G4 and rendered it as a 12 megapixel file with all effects (such as depth of field and reflections) turned on. While a 640x480 test render only takes a few minutes, the final 12 megapixel file took 29 hours, 46 seconds to render.
The computer in the picture is a Power Macintosh G3 "Minitower" and the monitor, keyboard, and mouse are also based directly on period Apple peripherals. All modeling was done by me based on pictures found on the internet. The only light sources in the picture are the lamp bulb and the glow from the computer monitor.
collaborative documentary in situ of the salon exhibition, the study gallery of modern art, poole (04-08 nov)
When you receive your design, you will notice that there are several pages for the charts. All my patterns easy to read because they are large (I use 6.8 to 7 stitches per inch)
There are two ways to work with pattern, you choose the one best you like.
One is to print page 1 , complete it and go to page 2 and do so till you finish entire pattern.
Another way is - ones you have your pages layed out, you would look for the center markings. It's a small arrow on one of the top row pages, then another small arrow on the left middle page.
You follow these 2 arrows until the intercept. This will be your first Stich on your design. You just continue stitching your pages until you have finished.