Arduino is making "light painting" through the use of LEDs. Learn how this works. Geometric chuck was a particular device that stacked up a number of rotating wheels which vary in speed and their offset to a particular central shaft.
Many a cannabis consumer has an intimate relationship with his bud. But few have gotten as up close and personal with pot as Ted Kinsman, a scientific photographer at Rochester Institute of Technology who does not indulge in the jolly green grass. When Kinsman’s otherworldly images of microscopic parts of the cannabis plant started circulating on the internet in 2018, not everyone believed what they were seeing. Some took to Snopes.com to verify that the suspiciously psychedelically-hued images were true representations of pot. The sleuthing site confirmed that they were genuine images of cannabis, but clarified that Kinsman had digitally colorized them to make parts of the plant pop specifically the parts that get you high.
Slit-Scan Technique Presents a Twist on Flowery Photography
Photographers and TikTokers can use the method to show how a narrow strip records something different in a series of sequential images
By:
Scientific American.
Scientific American.
The trippy twist stretching across your screen is a doctored flower though you won’t see this creation at a wedding reception anytime soon.
Each spiral is a product of an editing technique called slit-scan photography. In this documentation method, a photographer takes a video or string of back-to-back images as a scene rushes by. Then they cut a narrow strip out of the same place in each photograph or filmed scene and stack the slits in sequential order. The collage shows how a specific, narrow focal point recorded something different in each successive image. Since its early days of helping to determine which horse crossed a finish line first, the technique has evolved to include applications such as documenting all the objects that rol