I ran across this on YouTube and thought it was pretty creative:
She recorded herself dancing to a song at half speed and then doubled the playback speed. The effect is pretty funky. :)
Here's her YouTube page: BandyToaster
Akron, New York: the Colorado of the East
Apparently my hometown will soon be seen on Colorado tv screens in an anti-smoking commercial.
Not sure how they are going to pull this off the closest mountains are hundreds of miles away. :)
Original article: Buffalo News
The film shoot came to Akron after Spy ...
This is pretty messed up... after hatching these baby chicks are separated, sexed, tossed, boxed, drugged, and then shipped like any other factory made item.
Drove behind a Google Street View camera car a couple of days ago and thought my car might have it's 15 minutes of fame. What I found instead was something, well... um, unusual:
I've always found old hand painted posters to be really cool. So after running across an article about old propaganda posters from WWII, I thought I'd do a little digging on the interweb.
Some of these are really creative, others are complete lies, and the remaining are just hilarious... I can ...
[singlepic=188,200,300,,right]I had a flashback while sending out my Christmas cards this weekend.
The post office's new snowflake stamps look eerily similar to a few snowflake illustrations I created last year and started selling them on a stock photography site.
(To help show the similarities I placed my snowflakes on the same stamp ...
While I'm not a die hard fan of South Park, it's cut from construction paper style has always fascinated me and I've often thought about trying to put together a short cartoon together in Flash.
The thought resurfaced recently when I ran across a site that lets you design your own ...
This is an awesome shot... Do you see it?
The big crescent is the moon and the little one isn't an alien ship, but rather the planet Venus.
The shot was taken by Iván Éder and you can see a larger version at NASA's Picture of the Day.
Cool article that compares the human eye to conventional cameras:
"...we would see... 576 megapixels"
"...the dark adapted eye to be about ISO 800"
Notes on the Resolution and Other Details of the Human Eye