NEATOSHOP
Showing posts with label pixels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pixels. Show all posts

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Candle Animation




(YouTube link)

Using tea candles for pixels, YouTube member brusspup lit and relit for two weeks to create this video game sequence. It’s all worth it if you enjoy watching it! -Via: The Presurfer, Via: Neatorama

Saturday, May 22, 2010

PIXELS by PATRICK JEAN




New York invasion by 8-bits creatures !
PIXELS is Patrick Jean' latest short film, shot on location in New York. LINK: Youtube

Monday, February 08, 2010

Small Worlds


You will have to go to the LINK to play the game.

Sea Dave has made this wonderful, melancholic pixely game about exploring. It really is a thing of great beauty and you should totally play it. It won the cgdc6 competition, which means Sea Dave is the most awesome person on the planet

Sunday, December 20, 2009

World's Largest Spherical Panorama



This is a super high resolution photo. Use your mouse to zoom in and see a startling level of detail. This image is currently the largest spherical panoramic photo in the world. It is 192,000 pixels wide and 96,000 pixels tall. That's 18.4 billion pixels!

When it's printed, it will be 16 meters (53 feet) long at regular photographic quality. It was shot in early October 2009 from the top of the Zizkov TV Tower in Prague, Czech Republic. Hundreds of shots were shot over a few hours; these shots were then stitched together on a computer over the following few weeks. LINK: The Presurfer

Be sure to check this out, it's pretty cool.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Last Supper In 16 Billion Pixels




The Last Supper In 16 Billion Pixels is the highest definition photograph ever in the world. You can enlarge and observe any portion of the painting, giving you a clear view of sections down to as little as one millimetre square. LINK: Presurfer

Friday, May 16, 2008

Photosynthetic Photography: Pixels are Blades of Grass




That’s not a just any blurry photograph - in fact, it’s not made from either computer pixels or grains of silver halide, but blades of grass!

Heather Ackroyd and Dan Harvey of Santa Barbara Museum of Art created photosynthetic "photograph" by letting different amount of lights through on a field of growing grass.

Link, Via: Neatorama

WebUrbanist has a neat post about 6 other examples of bizarre art using grass, moss, and greenery: Link