
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Flotspotting

The art of Hyungkoo Lee

Kelp Forest Photography

The art of Victoria Reichelt

Mercedes-Benz F-CELL Roadster

Eulogy for the Shuttle Riding Bat

Miniatur Wunderland
This is the official corporate video for Miniatur Wunderland, the largest and most detailed model train set in the world, located in Hamburg, Germany. There are 800 trains on 10 kilometers of track. Ships and cars move too, and everything is controlled by computer. Over 200,000 tiny people inhabit this world. Really interesting to see.
Bathtub IV: a tilt shift video
This is a really great video made with a tilt shift technique, which makes everything look miniature. It's really amazing what a difference filming in large scale, and blurring selected areas of an image can do to the perception of it.
The Art of Brian Dettmer

Rare Quadruple Moon Transit on Saturn

Stuhlhockerbank

Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Paired Houses: but One is Abandoned

The Art of Liz Wolfe

Izzy the Lizard

Manchester Square Interior

Ed Ulbrich on TED
Ed Ulbrich is a special effects master, and for his TED talk, he tells the story of creating the effects for the movie "How Benjamin Button Got His Face". The star of the movie, or I should say stars, was Brad Pitt and a digital version of Pitt that was the actor for half the movie. Really amazing.
The Art of Lucy and Bart

The Art of Thomas Doyle

The Photography of Brandon Riza

Extraordinary Flower Gardens

Danfoss Universe Science Park

Robots!

Dazzle Camouflage Design

The art of Christian Faur

Winter 1972

Rev Vac Safety Syringe

Abandoned Pripyat, Ukraine

The Grand Daddy Trailer Hotel

Mathematically Derived Mirrors

The Worlds Most Complicated Corkscrew
This video demonstrates a mechanized wonder, designed by Rob Higgs, that can claim to be the worlds most complicated wine opener. It even pours your glass for you. Stupid music, and poor production value, but the machine is worth seeing.
The Photography of Clark Little

Big Foot Table

Projection Electro Video
This video is an amazing demonstration of digital light projection technology. Staged as a promotional event for a french website, the projection artists have tailored their show to this building, creating stunning architectural shadow effects. The music is pretty bad, but stick with it; it changes frequently.
1936 Footage of the Building of the Bay Bridge
This is kind of long, but it's pretty neat to see how the builders did their jobs. No OSHA for them.
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