Synthetic Vernacular using Artificial Intelligence 2.0 guides designers in utilizing tools such as Stable Cascade and Midjourney.
1. A giant snowman measuring 17 ft., made by two girls in Aberdeen, Scotland, Jan. 3, 1963 From the collection of Paul Popper found via The Folk Archive. 2. The Man Who Invented More Than 800 Iconic Toys 3. AI generated renderings of Gaudi-inspired Architecture Made with Mid Journey (AI powered text to art platform)…
Buildings come in a wide variety of sizes, shapes, and functions, and over the centuries we've gotten pretty good at constructing them.
Buildings come in a wide variety of sizes, shapes, and functions, and over the centuries we've gotten pretty good at constructing them.
In this workshop, we will focus on mastering technical tools, navigating Midjourney workflows, and honing curation techniques.
Mohammad Qasim Iqbal: Continuing my explorations through Midjourney, I decided to imprint the fabric features onto the villa typology. The prompt used “Palladian Villas” as a key term, as I wanted the artificial intelligence to pick up on the strong renaissance style of those Villas.
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Synthetic Vernacular using Artificial Intelligence 2.0 guides designers in utilizing tools such as Stable Cascade and Midjourney.
Buildings come in a wide variety of sizes, shapes, and functions, and over the centuries we've gotten pretty good at constructing them.
Explore Dharmic Realms' 3855 photos on Flickr!
Synthetic Vernacular using Artificial Intelligence 2.0 guides designers in utilizing tools such as Stable Cascade and Midjourney.
Completed in 2011 in . Images by Shannon McGrath . The Brick House is this architect’s own house, which inherently allowed a loosening of constraints and ability to test ideas about living, a core...
"Not My Job" Moments that Got the Job Done-ish - The internet has generated a huge amount of laughs from cats and FAILS. And we all out of cats.
This Flickr group is about celebrating how the British high street has changed from Victorian times right through to the modern day. We’re looking for your ‘photos in photos’ showing how your local high street has changed – whether it’s in the last year or over the last 100 years. So dig out your old family photos – or go along to your local library photo archive – and get involved. We just ask that you make sure that you have the permission to use the original photo. Please read our Group Rules for full details. Please tag your photos according to the location, so that we can start to build up a picture of how the high street has changed right across the UK. If you geotag them we’ll also be able to build up a Turn Back Time map. About Turn Back Time on TV: Turn Back Time – The High Street is a new six part series on BBC One. A parade of empty shops and a group of shop keeping families will be transported back to the birth of the high street in the 1870s, before being propelled through a century of dizzying change, right up to the modern era and the 1970s. The families' lives are turned upside down as they get to grips with how shopkeepers lived and worked in six key eras of British history. Overseen by a Chamber of Commerce which enforces historically accurate rules and regulations, the families have to deal with whatever history throws at them. Turn Back Time – The High Street is part of the BBC Hands on History campaign. If you’d like to find events and days out near where you live or download family activities, visit the Hands on History website. Other High Street History Groups: Here are some other Flickr groups that you might like (please let us know if you’d like to suggest others): Looking into the Past Past and Present Ghost Signs There is also a high street history project on History Pin - collecting images and stories of high streets through the ages. Find out more on www.historypin.com. You might also be interested in the BBC's Scotland's Landscape rephotography project, which uses archive photos alongside recent shots, to compare the changing landscape of Scotland. For more information about BBC Turn Back Time or Hands on History, go to:
If you ever feel like some architects live in their own fantasy land, you’re not the only one. The buildings that they create can range from majestic all the way to magical, and they’re sure to catch your eye with their flying buttresses, stoic columns, angelic balconies, and fearsome facades. However, you can sometimes get the idea that some of these artistic innovators haven’t fully thought some things through—like the fact that people actually have to live and work in the buildings they design.
When it comes to exciting architecture Bolivia might not be the first place you think about. But once you see these amazing Bolivian Mansions you will.