Woah……
This made my head hurt for a while. Interesting though. Nice animation too.
This is how I feel today.
Proud Creative – S4C
Mat Roberts, friend and Motion designer just put me on to a company called Proud Creative. The stuff they are up to is absaloutly awsome.
you should deffinalty check it out here.
Arduino’s- Introduction
After a talk in October, about Arduino’s, I have been really interested in them, so Adam brought his own in, so that we could learn how to install the programs into my computer, and how to get the arduino to do basic things like make a LED flash in intervals. Adam told us to go to www.ladyada.net, where it would show us how step by step how to do this.
Ladyada was really good because it has lessons, from how to set it up, to advanced things like making touch sensors and buzzers work, but we decided to just try to get an LED work! we managed to get the arduino to flash the LED light, we also figured out how to make the LED light to flash slower, and faster, by changing parts of the program in the software. I only completed lesson 0 and lesson 1, because I needed a breadboard to do anymore lessons on Ladyada, and I didn’t have one of those.
When I have enough money, I think that I will buy myself an arduino kit and breadboard myself to experiment with arduinos more.

Here’s a link;
www.ladyada.net
Michael Salter
Oregon-based Michael Salter works in that strange nexus between art and design. ‘I am critically looking at visual culture, extracting information and synthesizing my own new language in response. My work is usually realized in art installations in galleries, project spaces and museums. Currently my giant Styrobot is in the San Jose Museum of Art for a show they have opening up on April 12th about the robot’s evolution as a cultural icon’. The work shown above, a slip cast ceramic sculpture called subzero, was shown at Salter’s first New York solo show last January at the Jeff Bailey Gallery.
http://www.lostateminor.com/2008/04/09/michael-salter/
I really love these! there awsome, I’d love to do something allong these lines with a project in the future.
Edina Tokodi
Edina Tokodi is a Hungarian artist strutting her stuff on the streets of Brooklyn, using a few licks of moss to create largely nature-focused imagery. The works adorn both the exterior and interior of buildings – she’s done a number of installations – but it’s her new take on street art that is raising eyebrows. A little quirk: the moss continues to grow after she’s fixed the piece. That’ll bring the streets alive if anything does.
http://www.lostateminor.com/2008/11/21/mosstika/
this is essentially the kind of thing we are looking at, moving the ministry of sound logo and ethos into a new environment.
Zebra Crossings

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