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Creating an STL file from Processing with Modelbuilder using logic from Kyle McDonald's Makerbot app: github.com/kylemcdonald/Makerbot

 

A lot of cleanup of the code to do (including refactoring it so that it can accept depth data from either SimpleOpenNI or Shiffman's Kinect library), but I'm pretty happy with these results. You can check out the current draft of the code here:

 

gist.github.com/1151193

מוקדש לניב

Development of a corporate identity

by Wolfgang Schmittel

ABC Verlag, Zurich, 1978

 

With dustcover

Processed with VSCO with a2 preset

The photos a bit fuzzy, but I'm super excited about the guy on the left. He has ears!!

www.vimeo.com/334773

 

This one is using some tricks and optimisations found by a new friend of mine who is really really good at realtime graphics....

so a big big thanks to Inigo Iquilez (iq / rgba) for this!

 

The main optimisation is about the creation of the boxes in opengl... with all the tricks together the frame rate change from 15fps for 1800 cubes to 35 fps for 4500 cubes! (and that on my old crappy computer)

 

I'll post something on my website as soon as possible for all the boxes junkies that lives around here.

  

A-50 Prototype

 

/ Ground

 

/ Photo by KAI (2003)

한국항공우주산업

U.S. Air Force Academy -- Basic cadets from the class of 2023 arrived here today to begin their journey of becoming an officer in the U.S. Air Force. Incoming personnel transitioned quickly into a military mindset after saying goodbye to family and friends. (U.S. Air Force photo/Darcie L. Ibidapo)

1. Sample pixels from images of trees.

2. Use them as textures for a distorted grid.

 

Made with Processing.

Shot back in July of 2016 on an extremely hot day in OKC.

Processed with VSCOcam with 3 preset

Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.

Near the end of the summer, I was asked by the publishers of Popular Science magazine to produce a visualization piece that explored the archive of their publication. PopSci has a history that spans almost 140 years, so I knew there would be plenty of material to draw from. Working with Mark Hansen, I ended up making a graphic that showed how different technical and cultural terms have come in and out of use in the magazine since it's inception.

Diagram exemplifying eutrophication in coastal water bodies. The process begins with excessive inputs of nutrients (primarily N and P) into the system. These nutrients lead to a substantial increase in primary production (e.g. macroalgae) which eventually results in the transport of vast amounts of organic material to the seabottom. Subsequently, oxygen consumption increases dramatically as organic material starts to decompose while vertical delivery of oxygen through the water column is restricted by thermal and/or saline stratification (i.e. pycnocline). Bottom-dwelling organisms suffocate and/or migrate to other areas.

 

Credit: Pew Trusts

Nothing special here, just some tools that aid the creative process. Some pens, a cup of tea, music and toooooys.

Placing the Bubu bamboo trap

Alor - August 2024

Just messing around!

A MOC for the ROBOT LEGO Collectible Minifigures.

 

At Lego City's Extraterrestrial processing facility (EPF). Robots process new arrivals from other planets. From the control stations, the robots man the conveyor belt and the extraplanetary disinfect machine (on right). The robots keep Lego City safe from extraterrestrial creatures. :-)

The former mineral processing plant at the Geevor Tin Mine, now a mining museum.

a doodle which is the ode to doodling.

and PING out pop the eyes

A-50 Prototype

 

/ Ground

 

/ Photo by KAI (2003)

한국항공우주산업

Just scanned and edited this Ambrotype plate.

 

The ambrotype process is a photographic process that creates a positive photographic image on a sheet of glass using the wet plate collodion process. It was invented by Frederick Scott Archer in the early 1850s.

 

enjoy :]

Playing around with particles moving according to various rules, like accelerating toward a certain particle unless some distance condition is satisfied in which case they accelerate toward something else.

 

More like this in my set

www.flickr.com/photos/31382652@N00/sets/72157633365213026/

 

Made with Processing (processing.org).

They're the music equivalent of being buried alive.

Processed with VSCO with b5 preset

Natural light, multiple filters in Nik including overexposure, push process, etc.

Earlier today, the Guardian's data store released a list showing how much different countries and organizations have pledged to the Haiti eathquake aid effort.

 

I built a visualization tool to turn these numbers into something real - first, I asked how much money was being spent per citizen of these countries. Then I took that figure and converted it to Avatar minutes: how many minutes of Avatar would this earthquake aid pay for?

 

Sweden gives up the most Avatar minutes (37 - almost a quarter of the film) while Canada donates just 3 minutes of Avatar time per citizen (which probably wouldn't even make it through the credits).

 

These images are a screenshot from a tool which allows you to explore the data in detail.

 

blog.blprnt.com/blog/blprnt/finding-perspective-haiti-ear...

 

Built in Processing v.1.0

Vancouver, Canada - U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) preclearance operations at Vancouver International Airport. Passengers wait time in processing is limited through the use of kiosk programs such as Global Entry and NEXUS.

 

Photographer: Donna Burton

U.S. Air Force Academy -- Basic cadets from the class of 2023 arrived here today to begin their journey of becoming an officer in the U.S. Air Force. Incoming personnel transitioned quickly into a military mindset after saying goodbye to family and friends. (U.S. Air Force photo/Darcie L. Ibidapo)

Técnicas y Procesos de escultura

Como pueden observar ; la figura de la Virgen esta hecha en bandas de yeso aplicadas directamente a la estructura metálica (tela de gallinero ) .Esta técnica que deja un vaciado interior ayuda a aligerar el peso final y por supuesto a economizar materiales .

Las manos están esculpidas aparte .

Al fondo vemos el niño Jesús donde queda el ir esculpiendo los detalles

(substracción de masa en exceso ) .

==eng

Nativity scene - Sculpture process - Belen sculptured production; figure of the Virgin

Sculpture Techniques and Processes

As you can observe ; the figure of the Virgin is made in plaster bands applied directly to the metal structure (henhouse cloth).

This technique that leaves an internal void helps to lighten the final weight and of course to save materials.

The hands are sculpted separately.

In the background we see the baby Jesus where the carving remains, the details...

(subtraction of excess mass).

fr========

Techniques et procédés de sculpture

Comme vous pouvez le voir la figure de la Vierge est faite en bandes de plâtre appliquées directement sur la structure métallique (toile de poulailler) .Cette technique qui laisse une vidange intérieure permet d'alléger le poids final et bien sûr d'économiser des matériaux.

Les mains sont sculptées séparément.

En arrière-plan, nous voyons le bébé Jésus où la sculpture reste, les détails

(soustraction de la masse excédentaire).

  

ff mendoza

 

Inspired by MIT Media Lab, based on Theo's original design, still a bit too random

Vancouver, Canada - U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) preclearance operations at Vancouver International Airport. Handheld devices are used for faster processing of passengers through airports on international travel.

 

Photographer: Donna Burton

Check out more of my work and like my page

 

www.facebook.com/rhbillustrations

 

Will be selling prints soon, and giving some away on my page

I believe this cyanotype may be a portrait of Mrs. Kühn from the "Sunlight and Darkroom" Album.

  

Since the title page was in German we naturally believed that the album was made in Germany. I did notice that one view was a site that is very familiar, the monument on the top of Calton Hill in Edinburgh, Scotland. Closer examination showed that hotels pictured were also in Edinburgh and a cemetery had English inscriptions. Did Wilhelm Kühn take a trip to Scotland? I could find no information about Kühn and assumed I would never know. Several years passed before I tried again. After checking dozens of Google entries for other Wilhelm Kühns I finally found him on a Scottish genealogy site! Someone from Germany wrote looking for information on relatives who had lived in Scotland. The answer was as follows:

 

1901 Census Scotland

 

Wilhelm Kühn 44, Shopkeeper Picture Frame Maker Printseller & Artist's Colourman, b. German Sreb, Germany

Susanne Kühn 41, b. German Sreb, Germany

Bertha Kühn 8, b. Edinburgh

Luise Kühn 5, b. Edinburgh

Lizzie Campbell 15, servant

 

Address: The Linden Craigcrook Rd, Crammond, Midlothian

 

This has to be our Wilhelm Kühn! The new baby in the photographs must be Bertha who would have been born in 1893 when the album was produced. Wilhelm profession seems to fit really well with the artist/photographer who produced this album.

 

I love to put a name to the mother and baby!

 

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