View allAll Photos Tagged recursive
Variation of a "tile" based on the values of the recursive function f[1 + n - 2*f[-1 + n]] + f[f[-1 + n]].
Structure Synth / Sunflow. This one uses ambient occlusion shading. I processed it in Photoshop to emphasize the edges.
Heavily edited version of a hand-colored print posted by Okinawa Soba (see LITTLE BABYSITTERS WITH LITTLE BABIES -- A RURAL SCENE in OLD JAPAN) of recursive baby-sitting in old Japan.
There are many many interesting images of this type as well as of modern Okinawa at his Flickr site: Okinawa Soba
Thanks for the permission to reuse the images, Rob!
The Thai baht is also a unit of weight for gold, commonly used by jewellers and goldsmiths in Thailand.
One baht = 15.244 grams.
i've made my 2nd droste image of my son ryan - thanks to the droste tutorial written by pisco bandito, master of droste, among other things.
I've always been intrigued by recursive type pictures so this is my attempt at one. At some point I would love to try this with bigger, more decorative mirrors, but for now this will have to suffice. I came up with the idea while cleaning.
I've entered this one in the 52 pool but have another that I think I'll enter in the DPS SP Assignment. I can't decide which I liked better so I thought I'd just use both.
The moon circles the earth and the ocean responds with the rhythm of the tides.
This is a Rainorama: A panoroma shot in the rain...originated in Vancouver.
Learning a bit more about post-processing of images from a book I got for Christmas. What do you think?
As always, thanks for your views, comments and faves!
Saw the idea online, now I am thinking about printing this design onto a black t-shirt for myself...
I have made myself more of the work than the work itself. I have taken the perspective of the viewer and rotated it through four dimensions of incredualty or raised the level of the effaciousness of the interleaving cartouche.
the thing is, we've already lived and died so many times, woken up
this same morning
for so many lifetimes, walked through the same doorways to so many different destinations, that there's nothing new to discover, not even a novel thought remaining to be had. So we shut our own doors, muted our own memories, reshuffled our recollections, and continued falling through the loop, somewhere in the depths of our selves an ancient being closing its eyes to await a confluence of elements that has never been, something unrecorded to unfold.
Every once in a while, those eyelids twitch with a start. In another universe, another time, another life, that coruscating ray of light slanted just so, a single highlighted leaf setting your world ablaze and reminding you of the truths you made yourself forget, so the world could feel new and beautiful
for the first time again.
Best viewed large
Made with Mandelbulb 3d
See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:
Thank you!
There's something recursive about using carving axes on a tree . . .
. . . it would be even more so if they'd been carved with an axe, but I suspect it was a chainsaw. Ah well, recursion cancelled/
Heavily edited version of a hand-colored print posted by Okinawa Soba (see LITTLE BABYSITTERS WITH LITTLE BABIES -- A RURAL SCENE in OLD JAPAN) of recursive baby-sitting in old Japan.
There are many many interesting images of this type as well as of modern Okinawa at his Flickr site: Okinawa Soba
Thanks for the permission to reuse the images, Rob!
Best viewed large
Made with Mandelbulb 3d
See more photos and abstract drawings in my gallery on DeviantArt:
Thank you!
New Print(s) for "The Root of Root" a show of generative art by Marius Watz, Aaron Meyers and myself at the Devotion Gallery in NYC, opening Friday 22 Oct 2010.
Using recursive polygon subdivision (see www.flickr.com/photos/v3ga/11776797325/) with a voronoi map of random points.