Archive for September, 2009

Sky King Plane

Monday, September 7th, 2009


Fold Your Own Sky King Plane
It’s (relatively) simple to re-create the paper plane that set the flight-duration record. Use a letter-size sheet.

the can

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

The Can from Carlos Lascano on Vimeo.

body paint

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

The “Body Paint” installation by Memo Akten. It is an interactive installation and performance allowing users to paint on a virtual canvas with their body, interpreting gestures and dance into evolving compositions.
Custom software analyzes live feed from infra-red cameras in real-time, and converts shape and motion into colors, drips and brush-strokes. The software was written in C++ using the open-source toolkit openFrameworks and computer vision library openCV.

source

siegfried

Friday, September 4th, 2009

The “Siegfried” Opera!
“Video post-production coordinator under Urano Films for “Siegfried” opera. 5 hours of video, 14 simultaneous projectors. Presented in Ciudad de las Ciencias y Artes, Valencia-Spain, June 2008.”

Michael Paul Young

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Michael Paul Young is a creative design studio specializing in Graphic Design, Motion Graphics, Interactive, Photography and Sound development.

Michael has updated his site with a new layout and new work for clients such as American Express, The band U2, Diesel, MTV, VH1, Ford, Coca-Cola, Pepsi, HP, Apple, Microsoft, Samsung and Hitachi.

Michael Paul Young started his career as one of the directors at the progressive firm Vir2l which was world renowned for rethinking web design from 1998-2000. In 2000, he left Vir2l to start working with companies such as MTV, VH1, Ford, Coca-Cola, Bacardi, HP, Apple and Samsung. Since then, Michael has also founded, managed and directs daily the world renowned online design shop, YouWorkForThem.

source: cpluv

Los Angeles Wildfire

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Timelapse footage of wildfire north of Los Angeles, 08.30.09 Footage by Dan Blank. Music by Brian Eno. Shot on Panasonic HS-300. Actual length: 40 mins. Filmed from Tarzana, CA

8 Bit Trip

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

1500 hours of moving legobricks. A Stop-motion tribute to 8-bit video games.