Infovore » tag » colour
  • About
  • Archives
  • Projects
  • Talks
  • Code
  • RSS
  • Contact
  • Movies In Color
    "A blog featuring stills from films and their corresponding color palettes." Lovely.
    (tags: color colour movies palettes tone images )
  • Favorite Typefaces from 2011 « Opinionated Type
    Interesting list; worth spending some time staring at, for sure.
    (tags: design typefaces type )
  • This is What Happens When You Give Thousands of Stickers to Thousands of Kids | Colossal
    "This December, in a surprisingly simple yet ridiculously amazing installation for the Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, artist Yayoi Kusama constructed a large domestic environment, painting every wall, chair, table, piano, and household decoration a brilliant white, effectively serving as a giant white canvas. Over the course of two weeks, the museum’s smallest visitors were given thousands upon thousands of colored dot stickers and were invited to collaborate in the transformation of the space, turning the house into a vibrantly mottled explosion of color." Lovely. I really like Kusama.
    (tags: art interaction colour space yayoikusama )
  • Tuning Canabalt – Semi Secret
    "…in honor of Canabalt's first birthday (back on September 1st), why not write a guided tour of how everything works instead?" Lots of good tidbits on here; the stuff on hitboxes is particularly well observed and explained.
    (tags: design games canabalt tuning hitboxes )
  • 50 years of cyborgs: I have not the words. | Quinn Said
    This is all great.
    (tags: cyborgs culture quinnnorton prosthesis essay )
  • This isn't f***ing Dalston.
    I walked 4.5km down the A10, stopping every 200m or so to ask 10 unsuspecting passers by … "Excuse me, what area is this?" This is what I was told.
    (tags: nomenclature places visualisation dalston hackney london )
  • Sound Sculptures Dentsu London Sound Sculptures
    "We’ve just launched a project in collaboration with biochemist/photographer, Linden Gledhill for Canon’s PIXMA colour printer range.  The project features surreal ‘sound sculptures’ made of dancing droplets of paint captured in extreme detail as they react to sound waves." Just beautiful.
    (tags: film colour paint slowmotion )
  • Into The Abyss: Teal and Orange – Hollywood, Please Stop the Madness
    "Those of you who watch a lot of Hollywood movies may have noticed a certain trend that has consumed the industry in the last few years.  It is one of the most insidious and heinous practices that has ever overwhelmed the industry… I speak of course, of THE COLOR GRADING VIRUS THAT IS TEAL & ORANGE!!!" Oh dear. An entertaining follow up to that great Stu Maschwitz post on 'porange'.
    (tags: film grading porange colour trends pop retinaburning )
  • The day the music died – Vox
    "10 years ago, on this Friday in March of 2000, the Dot.Com bubble burst in the UK." [This is very good, Simon Wistow!]
    (tags: uk dotcom bubble internet crash newmedia simonwistow )
  • Chris Heathcote: anti-mega: post-digital media design, an introduction
    "Institutions are platforms / Sketching in things". Chris' introduction from the #mbsp SXSW panel; really good stuff, and that was only the introduction! Would have loved to have seen the whole thing.
    (tags: mbsp design chrisheathcote media services curation )
  • Raiding Eternity – Myspace – Gizmodo
    "Somewhere in the future, a picture of David Minor—in jeans and a tie, face beatific under a studio light, sleeves rolled up to expose the Eugene Debs quote tattooed on his arm—is berthed in a database table in off-system storage, waiting to be remade." Lovely, sharp, writing from Joel Johnson.
    (tags: joeljohnson memory internet technology writing )
  • Four Walks
    "I did a set of four walks in Austria; two long ones, two short ones. I did some "daystreaming" where using bits of technology I was updating my location, status and pictures as I walked." Ambient information gathering, whilst taking in the outdoors, and all for charity. Lovely.
    (tags: walking streaming ambient data hiking christhorpe )
  • Jeffrey Friedl’s Blog » Blog Archive » Finally, Geoencoding in Lightroom! Announcing my GPS-Support Plugin
    And it just worked first time. Awesome!
    (tags: lightroom gps geotagging photography plugin )
  • SPIEGEL Interview with Umberto Eco: 'We Like Lists Because We Don't Want to Die' – SPIEGEL ONLINE – News – International
    "The list is the origin of culture. It's part of the history of art and literature. What does culture want? To make infinity comprehensible. It also wants to create order — not always, but often. And how, as a human being, does one face infinity? How does one attempt to grasp the incomprehensible? Through lists, through catalogs, through collections in museums and through encyclopedias and dictionaries." Eco on lists.
    (tags: lists cataloguing umbertoeco interview )
  • Learning Vehicle | Edge Online
    "Today, the UK government's Department For Transport unveils a new browser-based MMOG, created by New York-based developer Area/Code. Designed for early teenagers to learn principles of traffic safety, it's probably the largest 'serious games' project ever to be created for the UK. Code Of Everand is the result of over two years of work with the Department For Transport by Area/Code principals and designers Frank Lantz and Kevin Slavin, not only because of its size and ambition, but also because of the complexities of developing it for a government body… We spoke to Lantz, Slavin and Simon Williams, who led the project at Carat, the Department For Transport's media agency, about what Code Of Everand is, how they pulled it off, and why they think it could prove that games can be a powerful platform for learning." Edge interview.
    (tags: edge games areacode franklantz kevinslavin online mmo transport uk )
  • Design With A Purpose, An Interview With Ralph Eggleston
    Wonderful, wonderful interview with Eggleston. So much care and attention in the work and the way he describes it; so many lovely illustrations. The "color scripts" alone are great, but really, it's all worth your time.
    (tags: pixar design illustration art animation films walle interview colour ralpheggleston )
  • Anger: Managing the amygdala hijack « Life at the Bar
    "The amygdala is the “fight or flight” and emotional memory part of the brain. Its job is to protect by comparing incoming data with emotional memories. An amygdala hijack occurs when we respond out of measure with the actual threat because it has triggered a much more significant emotional threat." Wow, there's actually science behind that feeling. Useful to give it a name, too.
    (tags: amygdala psychology brain happiness anger calm )
  • The blue and the green | Bad Astronomy | Discover Magazine
    "This is why I tell people over and over again: you cannot trust what you see even with your own eyes. Your eyes are not cameras faithfully taking pictures of absolute truth of all that surrounds you. They have filters, and your brain has to interpret the jangled mess it gets fed. Colors are not what they appear, shapes are not what they appear (that zoomed image above is square, believe it or not), objects are not what they appear." This is crazy – and one of the few optical illusions I've seen that still works when zoomed-in super close. It's so hard to make head or tail of.
    (tags: opticalillusion perception images illusion colour science )
  • io9 – Michael Bay Finally Made An Art Movie – Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
    "So, to sum up: Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen is one of the greatest achievements in the history of cinema, if not the greatest. You could easily argue that cinema, as an artform, has all been leading up to this. It will destabilize your limbic system, probably forever, and make you doubt the solidity of your surroundings. Generations of auteurs have struggled, in vain, to create a cinematic experience as overwhelming, and as liberating, as ROTF." This review is, essentially, amazing, and has elevated ROTF to a must-see for me.
    (tags: review io9 scifi transformers michaelbay movies cinema film art awesome )
  • kewlchops: Blog all dog-eared pages: The Best Australian Stories 2007 / Repossession
    "I'm continually drawn in by the belief that everyone finds their own way through life, age, cities, networks, whatever. And as Meehan's tale recounts, it's the whispers we leave on the wind that entice others to follow our hints." Just go and read the story; it's wonderful, and the fragments George picks out so carefully constructed. That made my evening.
    (tags: stories narrative shortstory storytelling conversation )
  • Glider Gun
    Future Platforms get a company blog, and give it a brilliant name to boot.
    (tags: futureplatforms blog conway gameoflife namesofthings )
  • Wilson Miner
    Wilson Miner redesigns again, and it's _gorgeous_. The subtle transparency of the black text in RGBa values, to pick up a hint of the underlying green, is a lovely touch.
    (tags: design xhtml css web grid colour )
  • World Exclusive: Love, The First Video | Rock, Paper, Shotgun
    Jaw well and truly on the floor.
    (tags: games pc mmo massive love independent development eskilsteenberg beautiful )
  • rodcorp: Maintenance, or the keeping of too much at hand, having delivered too much
    "Thus maintenance would become a punishment for delivery, which may be a hollow joke for some of us working in technology. And every now and then, when reading contracts, I would like to follow Henry VII's lead and pass a law against maintenance."
    (tags: service history maintenance servitude delivery )
  • zengestrom.com: Social objects, power, stickiness, and love
    "An object provides for [the wants we define ourselves as] through the lack it displays." Jyri Engeström on social objects and the way they create wants, fulfil needs, and they way that drives our behaviour around them. Jolly good.
    (tags: srs web socialobjects jyriengestrom socialsoftware sociology culture needs wants )

Archives

  • 2022  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2021  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2020  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2019  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2018  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2017  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2016  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2015  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2014  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2013  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2012  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2011  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2010  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2009  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2008  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2007  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2006  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2005  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2004  January February March April May June July August September October November December
  • 2003  January February March April May June July August September October November December

infovore.org is a weblog by Tom Armitage, 2003-2026.