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5 MINUTES OF WONDER

PINCity

21//05//2013

07//05//2013

19//04//2013

5 minutes

of wonder.

Creative Interiors.

I love this way of showing the ingredients needed to  make a recipe. I reckon this could become the new way of cooking for the modern, arty chefs! Illustrative cookbook at it's best.

The New Recipe Format.

//GRA

DES//

Underwater Village.

Every year, the town of Tragoess, Austria is submerged under 4,000sq metres of water from the melted icecaps from the mountain above. Crystal clear, these images are eerily creepy but at the same time, enthrallingly beautiful, and showcase just what would happen if global warming would do if it really did take hold. Even under the water, the grass is green and fresh, the trees stand sturdy, and the park benches stay perfectly intact. The photographer, Marc Henauer, explains that diving is only possible in one month in spring. usually, the lake is just 1m deep. "It's like swimming through a magical water fairytale".

Taken from dailymail.co.uk - 6/9/13.

Simplicity and connotations.

Screenprint & humour.

I love big cities, and I love Jenni Sparkes. Could just look at these all day.

I love anything to do with diet coke.

A FEW IDEAS I HAD.

Things I won't miss about home.

Angles.

Colour and composition.

A few facts about me.

WeAreUs.-Benga video.

Multi-award winnind duo of  Christopher Barrett and Luke Taylor. Educated on the graphics course at Kingston University, this video has been one of their biggest hits to date. Each record is hand-cut and rendered, and the overall idea is that the different sizes correspond to the beats of the track. Genius, beautiful and mechanically excellent.

Maths made beautiful.

Designers Cristian Ilies Vasile and Martin Krzywinski have created a beautiful series of designs extrapolating maths-and making it beautiful! 

 

(Right top) Progression and transition for the first 10,000 digits of φ.

(Right, middle) This piece of art shows the progression and transition for the first 1,000 digits of pi.

(Right, bottom) Left: Progression and transition for the first 10,000 digits of the accidental similarity number.

 

(Main image) At first, Vasile had the idea of connecting each digit of pi to its successive digit with links to the position of the numerically corresponding segments, creating beautiful images similar to the Spirograph toys popular in the 1970s. This design is based on transition paths for the first 10,000 digits of pi.

 

He also created a series of images showing ʽbubblesʼ outside the main image to signify where particular number sequences occur.

 

Finally, someone who can make maths not look quite so daunting.

 

Read the full story here.

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