Archive for the ‘Art and Design’ Category

Micronauts!

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009
Green Acroyear figure from the Micronauts Home Page.

Green Acroyear figure from the Micronauts Home Page.

Back in the late 70s, I had a few of the Micronaut toys. Until today, I had forgotten how many I had, and couldn’t find them on the net because I kept thinking they were called “Microbots,” which is a different toy altogether. Today, the neurons fired in the proper sequence, I remembered the correct name, and hit The Google.

The Micronauts Homepage
Inner Space Online
MicroHeritage Micronauts

Rummaging through the sites, I remembered the toys I had: the Acroyear (I) figure, the Mobile Exploration Lab, Crater Cruncher, and Hydra vehicles. My dream was to have the Battle Cruiser and the Micropolis Megacity.

Because all the parts used connectors that were the same size across the toys, you could build new things by taking bits of one toy and putting them on another. These combinations made it easy to come up with new ways of imaging how to play with the toys. To me this was better than Lego’s because instead of being generic blocks, the were bits and pieces that were shaped like things (and yeah, I never got into the Lego play sets, either). You could take rocket nozzles off one toy and put them on another, propellers off another, and so on, and build something completely new.

I wish the Micronauts would come back in to production. They were the best toys ever!

BMW GINA: The car that disrobes

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

One of the most striking and beautiful cars I have ever seen.

gina

Do want. Now.

Let there be lights!

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

I watched Close Encounters of the Third Kind the other day, and the climactic scene where the characters communicate with the aliens using sound and color reminded me of my stage lighting hobby. So I did some poking around to see what the current state of stage lighting is, and was pleased with most of the progress.

LED lighting seems to be really taking off, especially for mobile DJs. All the manufacturers, especially the perennial favorites American DJ and Chauvet, have LED color-mixing PAR and wash fixtures at extremely reasonable prices. LED moonflower effects and even some LED scanners have appeared as well. My only concern is with brighness, compared to traditional incandescent fixtures. American DJ does say that some of theirs are equivalent to a traditional 250 watt halogen, using a single high-intensity LED. Wow!

PC-based lighting control seems to have really taken off with a variety of USB-DMX and Ethernet-DMX adapters. Enttec has one, Martin has one, American DJ has one, Chauvet has one, and there are many, many others, including CDS Technology’s LanBox, which has been around for many years. The prices range from $60US to over $1,000US, and each comes with its own software, with the exception of the Enttec device, which is open and supported by many manufacturers. Of course, Ben Suffolk, continues to work on his USB DMX project.

My biggest disappointment is the continuing dearth of Mac-centric DMX control software. Enttec lists a few on their site, but I’ve been less than impressed by most of them. Of Windows packages, only American DJ’s myDMX really caught my attention. I booted Windows on my Mac, installed myDMX and was very impressed after just a few minutes. The thing that caught my eye was the live 3D view of your light rig. The 3D view reacts to your scenes and chases, including the position of moving lights. Programming scenes and chases is very straightforward, and much less complex than in Martin’s LightJockey.

The best thing I’ve found on the Mac is Ben Suffolk’s Chameleon and it’s open-source LightsOn framework for Mac OS X. Chameleon is a work in progress, but Ben has been using it in production already. I’ve played with it a bit, and it seems to be pretty straightforward. It doesn’t have the 3D visualizer like myDMX, but my few minutes of experimenting seemed to indicate that it was very easy to use as well. What excited me most is that it uses other inexpensive hardware to make the lighting designer’s work much easier. It controls the light rig with either Enttec’s DMX Pro interface or Ben’s own USB DMX interface. In addition to the usual keyboard and mouse Chameleon can use custom input devices, like Behringer’s BCF2000 MIDI control surface (with motorized faders!) and programmable keyboards like the X-Keys Pro.

Chameleon and LightsOn use XML for describing fixture attributes, which should make for a very flexible way of describing the myriad of lighting devices on the market. The spec is still under development, as well as the tools to create profiles, but the only big thing missing in the spec itself is a way of including a graphic of a fixture’s gobos in the definition.  I’m sure this will be addressed very soon.

I’ve got high hopes for Chameleon and LightsOn. This could be the answer to the Mac-o-phile lighting designer who doesn’t need a full-on media system like those from Arkaos, and could be inexpensive enough for small venues, bands, and amateurs like myself.

Link: USB DMX

Bummer day ends well

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Today the news in general (beginning with the topic of the previous post) has put me in a foul mood. Luckily, a spankin’ new Veer catalog arrived today and was waiting on the table when I got home. Of course, I went to the Veer site and checked out their blog, The Skinny. As they say, one thing leads to another, ending with these wonderful finds. Thanks, Veer, for salvaging a miserable day.

Snow Prints

snow-print-4683

Which lead to gorgeous street art on the Wooster Collective.

More browsing on The Skinny lead to this freaky-cool table video:

Which lead to:

Which lead to a partial upload of this:

Which can be downloaded as a live demo for ATI Radeon 9700 cards on ATI’s Developer Demo Site.

Wow. Happy.

Tiny Machine

Monday, December 13th, 2004

I like excellent design, I like fan-made stuff, I like iPods — this homemade ad has all three. Ad creator and school teacher George Masters has the marketing world in a tizzy.

Apple should just go ahead and buy the 60 seconds during the Superbowl and place this as their ad. Damn, Steve, just hire the guy at least!

Via Airbag

More:
Wired News
George Masters’ site

Space Fashion

Saturday, October 16th, 2004

My friend Michael over at RocketForge posted a little blurb about an organization called Yuri’s Night, an organization that aims to bring the art, music, dance, and fashion communities together with the space community.

Nnng? Sounds interesting. Of course, this means that the crew for the VSS Enterprise will look fabulous.

Dali and Disney

Friday, October 15th, 2004

I’ve recently lamented the unimaginativeness of Disney’s big animation releases. What happened to the idea behind Fantasia, that the studio would continue to experiment with animation in fantastic new ways? No doubt, the use of computer animation in Disney’s popular releases has been groundbreaking, but there is no artistic cutting edge — Pixar seems to own that category, especially with its short films.

I’m happy to see that Roy Disney has resurrected a 57-year-old collaboration between Walt Disney himself and Salvador Dali, called Destino. It premiers at the Animazing Gallery in New York this weekend.

Disney, please do more work like this, instead of just anthropomorphized animal heroes and mythologized princesses.