Visual experiment by Tobias Gremmler uses motion capture of martial arts performances and presents them in abstract ways: Link
A principios de los años sesenta del siglo XIX, Eadweard Muybridge lleva a cabo un curiosos experimento que constituye uno de los más interesantes precedentes del cinematógrafo: El Caballo en Movim…
Dibujar la figura humana en movimiento es un tema complejo debido a todo lo que implica, aquí profundizaremos en algunos aspectos a considerar.
JF Ptak Science Books LLC Post 1000 I came to this post backwards. My primary interest was the frontispiece portrait of the author of a 1539 book on wrestling, showing the somewhat long-in-tooth author with scraps of tuffy hair and...
After studying the avant-garde movement of Futurism, in the classes of Grade 9 we decided to reproduce the movement of a figure using the method of overlapping sequences and force lines used by the…
Oh Hi. I'm Ryan, I'm 19 and love gaming. games, music, drinking and friends are all which make me happy!! always up for a chat and banter!!
Photographers from around the globe are invited to submit one motion photo in .GIF format in any or all of six categories, which include Landscape, Lifestyle and Action for the award created by Saatchi Art and Saatchi Gallery together with Google+.
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Motion blur is the apparent streaking of rapidly moving objects in a still image or a sequence of images such as a movie or animation. [mainimage] When you see a picture that showcases a motion blur in action photography, you may think only professional
Dancers are admired for the way they move. Fluid and graceful, they are often seen twirling and spinning across an open stage. Photographer Bill Wadman
Download this Free Photo about Motion blur of automatic train moving inside tunnel in tokyo, japan., and discover more than 31 Million Professional Stock Photos on Freepik. #freepik #photo #fasttrack #motionblur #tokyocity
Dancers are admired for the way they move. Fluid and graceful, they are often seen twirling and spinning across an open stage. Photographer Bill Wadman
Physics 1 - Week 4 - Chapter 8
Time is one of those concepts that has always been a mystery to us. It’s an uncontrollable force, something that has a mind of its own and a freedom that no civilization can mimic. Clocks have been created to measure it, novels have been written about it, and inventions have been dreamed up to master it. Nobody has been able to do a damn thing about it. Except for one guy. Harold Eugene Edgerton was a genius. During his lifespan from April 6, 1903 to January 4, 1990, he revolutionized the worlds of science, art, and everything in between. He devoted his life to inventing, developing, and applying his work to the stroboscopic flash. An electrical engineer with a doctorate of science from MIT, he couldn’t have known he was changing art forever. Before the strobe, photographers struggled with providing bright light and had to deal with the limits that shutters created. Edgerton replaced mercury vapor with xenon and argon in flash bulbs, which created brighter flashes for less than a microsecond. With his strobe he could create remarkable images that people had never seen before. Edgerton could essentially freeze time. This included capturing multiple flashes in still photography, which created an image that showed the progression of something, such as several of the positions in a golfer’s swing in one frame. He could also use motion photography to create stop-motion images or slow motion, like a boy running. Edgerton’s flash did everything from creating spectacular images in National Geographic, helping science labs to study subatomic particles, gearing up World War II, aided Jacques Cousteau by inventing a sonar device called the “pinger” to measure distance to the sea floor and later the “boomer,” which mapped out layers of sediment beneath the ocean floor. Last but certainly not least, he revolutionized photography that would end up in well-known art galleries around the world and in the hands of 18-year old girls who grew up in small suburban towns such as myself.
Descubre cómo hacer un barrido fotográfico o panning con estos consejos. Consigue impresionantes fotografías que transmiten movimiento.
Dave Whyte, an Ireland based PhD student, creates oddly satisfying Gifs based on mathematical data. I recently stumbled upon his work on Tumblr and I was hooked right away. His geometric Gifs are purely mesmerising. I can sit and watch them all…
The opening scene of our latest piece for @Indie Design required some fairly solid Duik and Joysticks rigs. Here is a loop of the lead character eternally chasing a life worth meaning. Woah now. F...
Dive into our projects and get to know more about how we craft fully animated pieces to motion graphics and explainer videos.
Dancers are admired for the way they move. Fluid and graceful, they are often seen twirling and spinning across an open stage. Photographer Bill Wadman