Swirlee

Posts tagged :

October19

BlueSky Studios Challenge

Yip-Yips by Lizette for BlueSky Studios ChallengeBlueSky Studios Challenge A brilliant blog where illustrators are challenged each week to submit their “take” on a subject, e.g. movie monsters, Saturday morning cartoons, or muppets. (via TV Squad)

September17

Banksy “Barely Legal”

Banksy "Love Poem"

Banksy has gotten a lot of press for his Paris Hilton CD stunt, but a lot of the works at this weekend’s “Barely Legal” show are far more interesting. (via Waxy.org)

September8

Average Ninja

Average Ninja

Since yesterday’s post I’ve spent a lot more time beating on my video averaging script. Actually, I rewrote the thing from scratch, and it’s looking pretty good. For my second proof-of-concept (above) I used all 28 Ask a Ninja videos available on Revver. Thanks to the fine folks in #ffmpeg on Freenode, I managed to really speed up the video capture portion of the script. This time I went for 800×600 and captured a frame every 20 seconds. Capturing 272 frames from almost four hours of video took six and a half minutes and averaging them took just over four minutes. Once again, I tweaked the contrast of the final image a bit.

The real bottleneck in the process is memory. Read the rest of this entry »

September6

The Average Lonely Girl

The Average Lonely Girl (Small)

I killed most of the afternoon writing a Ruby script that takes a directory full of video files, goes through them one at a time plucking out a frame every X seconds, and then averages the frames into a single image. My guinea pig? lonelygirl15. The YouTube-ingenue-who-might-be-a-hoax seemed like an easy target for some deep metaphor about synthetic art or art imitating life imitating art or something, but that’s a metaphysical rabbit hole I don’t really have the energy for today. It’s left as an exercise for the reader.

The technical details I can handle, however: The above image is a mathematical average of 25 videos (all of lonelygirl15’s videos to date except the first two, which you might consider “non-canon”) which total about 49 minutes. One frame was taken every 15 seconds, for a total of 209 frames. The script is about 75 lines of Ruby code, but the real heavy lifting is done by the spectacular RMagick and FFmpeg (sadly, there were no rmovie binaries available for Windows, so I had to talk to the command line). After the script grabbed the frames and averaged them, all I did was up the contrast a bit in Paint Shop Pro.

The script is theoretically limited only by memory and processor cycles. The image above took six or seven minutes to “render,” about half of which was capturing the frames, but the averaging itself ate up pretty much all of my memory, so working with more frames or higher resolution captures would require a bigger commitment, or at least a spare Linux box (working on that).

To be perfectly clear, I’m not at all the first person to do this sort of thing. Jason Salavon has done it with Playboy centerfolds, real estate, talk show hosts, and even porn, and Meggan Gould has averaged the results of Google Images searches to fascinating effect.

August31

Stolen Munch paintings found safe

The Scream by Edvard MunchStolen Munch paintings found safe “Two masterpieces by artist Edvard Munch have been recovered two years after they were stolen from an Oslo museum. The Scream and Madonna were found in a police operation. ‘We are 100% certain they are the originals. The damage was much less than feared,’ police said.” The amount of relief I’m feeling right now is surprising. I’m glad they’re back. (via Boing Boing)

July26

Ron Mueck sculptures

Ron Mueck sculptures

Ron Mueck, an artist who has crafted puppets and models for films including Labrynth, creates ultra-realistic silicone sculptures of people (PNSFW). If not for their fantastic scale (and their nudity), it would be hard to tell them from gallery patrons. The Washington Post has a more SFW gallery of his work.

July25

Strange statues around the world

Strange statues around the world

I’d love to see a Google Maps mash-up of these strange statues around the world. I need more details! (via Boing Boing)

July12

Business Reply Pamphlet

Business Reply Pamphlet

Business Reply Pamphlet is a brilliant and hilarious 16-page infographic pamphlet by artist Packard Jennings, designed to be stuffed in business reply envelopes and sent back to junk-mailers. Jennings’ home page is a great collection of public art, media hacks, and gentle subversion.

©1999-2006 Jordan B. Running