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All rights reserved © Francesco "frankygoes" Pellone

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Escher Droste Effect - a few tests....

 

created with mathmap on OS X

 

many thanx to Seb, breic, gadl, loydb, Pisco & all the participants in the escher droste group who helped me get my non-mathematically inclined brain around all of this...

 

Sam Rohn :: Location Scout :: New York City

Escher Droste Effect - a few tests....

 

(DUMBO is a neighborhood in brooklyn, btw, not the disney film)

 

created with mathmap on OS X

 

many thanx to Seb, breic, gadl, loydb, Pisco & all the participants in the escher droste group who helped me get my non-mathematically inclined brain around all of this...

 

Sam Rohn :: Location Scout :: New York City

Portrait with recursive Fibonacci curves

the texture of this is more interesting, I think, than the color. The form, however has an apparently recursive tunnel going farther into the ball than the size would suggest.

#FlickrFriday

#Recursion

 

Cross-sectional view of a Nautilus shell.

 

Super-Multi-Coated MACRO-TAKUMAR 50mm f4

  

Large size | Original uploaded size | My portfolio

 

Using a Polaroid Pogo printer my brother Frederico gave me for my birthday, I managed to convince my daughter Carolina to express several different moods and to hold Pogo prints. It was a lot of fun!

minneapolis minnesota

 

Looking up the International Market Square building stairwell in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This is the largest commercial double helix staircase in the US - built with straight runs and flat landings it intertwines two separate sets of stairs, one for going up and one for going down.

 

More than you probably want to know:

Although it looks like artwork by M. C. Escher, these unique stairs have a more utilitarian reason for existence - that's what I was told: International Market Square used to be the old Munsingwear underwear factory. George Munsing invented non-scratchy underwear in 1891 which was a miracle for the textile industry but sewing the stuff all day was not a fun job and employee morale became a problem. When George designed his new state-of-the-art factory in 1904 he spared no expense by putting in one set of stairs to accommodate happy people coming to work, and one set of stairs for the exhausted people leaving. With two sets of stairs, different shifts of employees would never run into each other - morale problem solved.

 

The Munsingwear company was extremely successful and became the largest manufacture and distributor of underwear in the world. Eventually competition caught up and market declines forced Munsingwear to close down the Minneapolis building in 1981. In 1985, the old factory was renovated and the complex was renamed International Market Square, which currently holds offices, shops, showrooms and this cool set of stairs.

 

52 Weeks of 2024

Week No. 21: Droste Effect

Category: To infinity and beyond!

 

I used GIMP, tried a tutorial, which was very confusing. Didn't really know what I was doing but I quite liked this result even it doesn't quite fit the traditional "infinity" image.

 

Infinity effect

The Droste effect, known in art as an example of mise en abyme, is the effect of a picture recursively appearing within itself, in a place where a similar picture would realistically be expected to appear. This produces a loop which in theory could go on forever, but in practice only continues as far as the image's resolution allows.

Wikipedia

 

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

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

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

This was a largely green thing with reflections/ It has been dreamed up a little bit with the intention of just making it a little more interesting, but the recursive space in the original quickly became obscure while the red and yellow took on a life of its own leaving the spaces highly ambiguous.

 

From an isocele rectangle triangle of Kraft paper.

Diagram in Geneva convention book 2023

Re-sharing as a new crop. Self-portrait.

 

Sometimes meaning emerges after completion. "The Power" by Naomi Alderman still pops into my head on a daily basis. Born into a female body (yep, I've seen a copy of my karyotype), I think a *lot* about gender, biology, and society. Alderman's novel illuminates in a far deeper, nuanced, and thought-provoking manner than a simple what-if-power-dynamics-shifted hypothetical sci-fi trope. Seeing this image now, it's a retrospective homage :).

 

Had to skip the novel's more disgusting bits, as those were not images I wanted to be regularly scrubbing from my brain. But the book's visceral grip keeps reeling my imagination back into that world with questions, more riddles regarding power's ability bolster the body while corrupting the psyche. And why it does for some and not others.

 

This was the first image from 2022; when I saw that hallway, it screamed to become a light-painted chiaroscuro-bedecked wormhole. Used a step ladder as a tripod because getting the compression for the recursive pattern required a telephoto lens, and running back and forth while leaving a pile of gear unattended was a task that the tripod just wasn't up for.

Structure Synth / Sunflow

 

I was inspired by Alverto's image here. I really like the caustics.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/26137209@N00/61663125/

 

I started out trying to do caustics too, but it evolved into more of a study in shadows!

Well, this is not flower, it is a bucket of oranges arranged with photoshop to look like flower.

 

And to all my friends, thanks for your comments I am too busy these days and can't appear much in flickr.

 

Please see the original shot below

Macro Mondays theme: Just White Paper. Origami Fujimoto Hydrangea (lowest 3 levels out of 6, approx. 2 inchesx2 inches in picture). Back-lit using the yellowish light from a flashlight.

Folded from white printer paper cut into a square.

I loved the recursive experience of having the Fracture crowd together in real life and gathering in Second Life simultaneously.

Featuring a 2004 Tag Heuer Kirium Formula 1.

 

Just playing around with the dashboard of the 2006 Infiniti G35 Coupe. Another of my Escher (or Droste) type photo manipulations. [see the first in the set for more info].

 

©2008 David C. Pearson, M.D.

 

Z-Mount and two shaving mirrors!

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

This image and its name are protected under copyright laws.

All their rights are reserved to my own and unique property.

Any download, copy, duplication, edition, modification,

printing, or resale is stricly prohibited.

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

This is a single molecule which can be tessellated. It is made from a molecule of Whirlwind Tessellation placed inside a larger one. More than the two levels shown here are possible. Curved folding combined with shiny metallic paper results in a very smooth model which feels almost as if folded from fabric.

 

This molecule is an example of a class of recursive molecules which differ from typical recursive tessellations: you have to build it from the inside out (i.e., start with the smallest copy of the pattern and work outwards towards the larger ones) while in designs such as Fujimoto’s Hydrangea you start from the outer copies and work towards the center, and are able to always add another, deeper level, as far as the paper’s thickness allows. In other words, in Stacked Whirlwind Tessellation, the center of the molecule is “thin” while in Hydrangea it is “thick” and thus allows another iteration to be folded.

 

Link: origami.kosmulski.org/models/stacked-whirlwind-molecule

We got this all-white puzzle as a Hanukkah gift. It was interesting to put together.

If you are a fan of my work, I would really appreciate it if you would "like" my page on facebook at: Josh Sommers Art. Thank you!

 

I think I figured out why my throat is so sore today. It's full of recursivity. This was my first image to ever be viewed over 20,000 times! Thanks Everyone!

 

Please check out the redone version of this image Eternal Scream 3 as it corrects the flaws in this version, including the jaggies around the teeth.

Seattle Skyline from Kerry Park processed with a recursive mozaic algorithm with non-uniform thresholds.

 

Made with processinrg.org.

This is a recursion of my Twisted Bird Base Tessellation (the non-recursive version was published in Origami Deutschland 2016 convention book and International Origami Internet Olympiad (IOIO) 2016). The recursive / fractal version looks interesting but it's rather hard to collapse.

 

I think I saw somewhere on the internet a picture of a very simialr or even identical tessellation molecule designed by o'sorigami.

Project50 50/50

 

Massive thanks to Martin Sarah at Kodak Express in Lincoln, she very kindly printed all these images for me.

 

My Photo SiteMy BlogMy TwitterFifty of Fifty

 

Strobist:

• 580ex centre top on 1/16 power through my Westcott Softbox.

• 430ex on 1/8 power top left through an umbrella box.

• 430ex on 1/8 power top right through an umbrella box.

 

I wont go on here, I'll save it for Monday's blog post but I wanna thank some of the awesome people that have helped me along the way:

 

John O'Nolan, Kym Ellis, Adam 'Light Stand' Rhoades, Richard Teasdale, Ashley Baxter, Phil Barker, Nick Hayward, Amy HIll, Roz Nunn, Adam Hockley, Sarah Whittaker, Theresa, Melissa Owen, Ben Drury, Mikee Taylor, Leah Barr, Ollie Wilkins, Charlotte Wingad, Olivia Ford, Giles McNeill, Rosie Ablewhite, Martin Czimmerl, Vimeo & anyone else that got involved. You are all awesome.

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

During corona measures it is difficult to go out, so I decided to play a bit around in Gimp 2.10

Posting a photo from a trip I took earlier this year for this week's Macro Mondays theme of "STRIPES" this herringbone pattern is from the comfy chair in the room, taken with my iPhone.

 

Note the itty bitty stripes that make up both the white and black stripes. Recursive? (Best seen at full size)

______________________________

 

Update Tuesday 2 June 2015: You folks keep surprising me. I was swamped in a customer visit today and my phone kept buzzing as more and more of you faved this image. (Not complaining, don't stop!) I had feared that the magic had left me, but thanks to y'all, this is my second EXPLORE in two weeks, and I couldn't do it without you!!! HmM, y'all!

Best viewed large

Made with Mandelbulb 3d

 

See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:

www.deviantart.com/ciokkolata

Thank you!

 

"It's not so much that history is simply cyclical. It seems to progress via recursive, repeated fractal patterns and minute variations." -Grant Morrison

"Triangles are my favorite shape

Three points where two lines meet"

alt-J

  

The Tetrahedron in Bottrop is a walkable steel structure in the form of a tetrahedron with a side length of 60m, resting on four 9m tall concrete pillars. It is located in Bottrop, Germany, on top of the mine dump Halde Beckstraße and serves as the town's landmark.

 

The design is reminiscent of the Sierpinski tetrix: placing four half-size tetrahedra corner to corner and adding an octahedron in the middle, a full-size tetrahedron is formed; this process can be repeated recursively to form larger and larger tetrahedra.

[description taken from Wikipedia]

 

Panorama consisting of 21 single frames, stiched in Microsoft Image Composite Editor, post-processed in Lightroom 4, Photomatix and Affinity Photo

For my blog on the autonomy of AI's creative intelligence www.screenpunk.nl

Strange things in the mirror, are the refreshments by Droste I wonder?

 

#145

 

Created with www.dumpr.net - fun with your photos

For my blog on the autonomy of AI's creative intelligence www.screenpunk.nl

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