A blog of projects, people and things that define what I do ..
Pattern | Surface | Projection Mapping | Inventions | Digital Installations | Creatives | Public Art | Wallpaper | Rapid Prototyping advances | 3D | Products | 3D | Stuff I've seen |

Simon Beck

Chris Fraser

Andres Amador

 Au Vieux Panier hotel in Marseille, France

More Park Seungmo

Korean sculptor Seung Mo Park creates giant portraits by cutting layer after layer of wire mesh.

Ben Long’s blurred billboards in Birmingham

 Gabriel Dawe explores the artistic elements of textiles and embroidery

The project was commissioned by Samsung in Portugal for a new phone, and the video mapping was done by Oskar & Gaspar from an idea by agency Excentric. There don’t seem to be any details online yet about the tech specifics, so lets just revel in our ignorance and enjoy the visuals. .. thanks to maskoff

Virtual Still Life. I like the idea …but not the best execution.

Fading Mirror Mirror .. like it …  by Amsterdam designer Thomas Eurlings, the Fading Mirror has a printed gradient under the glass to give a soft-focus reflection

I am starting to see a increase in ‘innovative illusions’ in art, public installation and design.. and I like it, it is inclusive in the audience, often easy to maintain and inspires people to see differently. Perfect example below

Bâtiment (Building) is a mirrored installation by artist Leandro Erlich currently on display at Le 104 in Paris through March 2012.

(Source: thisiscolossal.com)

Anish Kapoor is one of them artists that is almost uncool to like .. but he does deliver the good. I love this reinterpretation of the reflection and surface, I like the way this references the polygonal world of 3D, even though I am positive it was not his intention

Just using a napkin .. I close my case

(Source: simonschubert.de)

There was something very magical about large scale projections, this was before the over indulgence of projector mapping. I still find these works more intresting and ground braking than the majority of the stuff I see online. Jim Sanborn, developed the ‘topographic projections and implied geometries’ series in the late 1990’s.

(Source: designboom.com)